Reducing hospital beds: what are the lessons to be learned?
Année de publication: 2004
For many people, the hospital has come to
symbolize the modern health care system.
Yet in many countries, the role of the acute
hospital is changing, with an emphasis on
outpatient diagnosis and treatment as well as
alternatives to long-term hospital care, leading to reductions in numbers of hospital
beds. International comparisons that show
large variations in hospital bed numbers,
combined with the knowledge that hospitals
are relatively expensive, often create political pressure to reduce hospital capacities. As
a result, there is considerable interest in how
countries that have reduced hospital capacity
have done so, and what impact such changes
have had on different stakeholders.
This policy brief looks at how hospital
bed capacity has changed in Europe during
the past decade and at possible explanations
for these changes.