House doctors demand savings in health insurers' administrative costs

Markus Blumenthal-Beier, head of the German house doctors' association, calls on statutory health insurers to cut their administrative costs. He proposes halving them mid-term rather than restricting patient care. CSU politician Klaus Holetschek advises seeking cooperations and mergers.

Amid debates on rising costs in Germany's statutory health insurance, Markus Blumenthal-Beier criticizes the insurers' administrative expenses. «Health insurers could ask their members what they prefer to pay contributions for: finding a house doctor's practice in future or financing 90 insurers», he told the Rheinische Post. He demands: «It's time for insurers to apply the red pen to themselves, not just to their insureds' care». Administrative costs should be halved mid-term. There are currently 93 statutory health insurers in Germany, down from 1,815 in 1970 and 420 at the millennium. Klaus Holetschek, CSU parliamentary group leader in Bavaria's state parliament, advises insurers to «seek synergies, expand cooperations and initiate mergers proactively – before legislators act». Last year, insurers recorded a surplus after contribution hikes, but expenses rose sharply. Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) states that since 2024, spending on hospital treatments, medicines and practice services has outpaced revenues. An expert panel will present stabilization proposals by late March, with broader reforms by year-end. This addresses a projected multi-billion euro funding gap for 2027.

مقالات ذات صلة

German cabinet meeting finalizing 2027 health reform draft with 16.3 billion euro savings target.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

German government finalizes 2027 health reform draft with 16.3 billion euro savings target

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Following Chancellor Merz's announcement that the bill was practically ready, the German government finalized its health reform draft on April 28, targeting 16.3 billion euros in savings from 2027—down from an initial 19.6 billion—to address a 15.3 billion euro deficit at statutory health insurers. The Greens decry it as a burden on insured people and companies, while Health Minister Nina Warken calls it balanced. Cabinet approval is set for Wednesday.

As the April 29 cabinet decision approaches, Health Minister Nina Warken and Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil signal openness to adjustments in the statutory health insurance savings package, originally based on the Finance Commission's 66 proposals. Following the recent draft release and coalition disputes, associations and opposition intensify criticisms.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Federal Health Minister Nina Warken's (CDU) draft law to stabilize statutory health insurance—building on her April 14 announcement of the Finance Commission's 66 savings proposals—is now public, aiming for nearly 20 billion euros in relief by 2027. Coalition partners, especially the CSU, criticize the burden distribution amid a looming 15 billion euro deficit.

Andreas Gassen, head of the Kassenärztliche Bundesvereinigung (KBV), dismissed demands for a guarantee of specialist doctor appointments within three weeks as „bullshit“ and „socialist regulatory frenzy“. He stressed that appointment allocations must be based on medical need. Gassen was responding to SPD parliamentary group leader Matthias Miersch.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

On the coming Monday, many pharmacies across Germany will close all day to protest for higher fees. Statutory health insurers criticize the action, accusing pharmacies of false claims since fees have risen since 2013.

Saxony-Anhalt's Minister President Sven Schulze has insisted on the states' right to have a say in planned social reforms. He called for close coordination and special consideration of East German concerns. He made these statements in an interview with Germany's Editorial Network (RND).

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Majority parties in Region Uppsala propose a budget with 592 million kronor extra for healthcare next year. Investments target primary care, elderly care, and cancer treatment. The opposition calls it an irresponsible budget, saying the funds mainly cover wage increases.

 

 

 

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