KBV head Gassen calls specialist appointment guarantee „bullshit“

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.

Andreas Gassen, chairman of the Kassenärztliche Bundesvereinigung (KBV), criticized demands for binding deadlines for specialist appointments in an interview with RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland (RND). „Our system will crash if we do not finally create binding rules based on medical need and not on personal wishes of whoever“, he said.

Gassen was responding to SPD parliamentary group leader Matthias Miersch, who called for a legal entitlement to an appointment within three weeks. Miersch proposed a bonus-malus system in doctors' remuneration: „Those who do not offer appointments will see their budget reduced.“ Former Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (SPD) had previously demanded a guarantee for statutory insured patients.

In the context of planned health reforms, Federal Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) aims to avert higher health insurance contributions with a savings package. An expert commission recommended 66 measures. The reform envisions patients first visiting their general practitioner, who refers to specialists as needed within a fixed period. Implementation is expected around 2028.

Gassen welcomed the planned primary care system in principle but demanded a clear definition of urgency. Only a small percentage of appointments are acute, requiring treatment within hours or days. „The vast majority can medically wait weeks or months“, he said. Current average waiting time for statutory insured is 42 days (2024), up from 33 days in 2019.

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Press conference photo of health insurance chief Andreas Gassen calling for abolition of voluntary services to save 1 billion euros amid 12 billion euro gap.
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Health insurers' chief demands abolition of voluntary services

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Andreas Gassen, chairman of the Kassenärztliche Bundesvereinigung, calls for the complete elimination of voluntary additional services provided by statutory health insurance funds to achieve savings. He estimates the potential savings at nearly one billion euros per year. This comes amid a looming financing gap of twelve billion euros in the statutory health insurance system.

Andreas Gassen, head of the Kassenärztlicher Bundesverband, advocates for closing more hospitals and expanding ambulatory care in Germany. He criticizes health insurers' cost-cutting plans and demands higher taxes on tobacco and alcohol, plus a sugar tax. The revenues should be earmarked for the health system.

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German Health Minister Nina Warken is calling for swift implementation of a new law allowing annual prescriptions for chronically ill patients. The measure aims to cut unnecessary doctor visits without raising costs for insurers or contributors. Yet, no concrete agreement on the details has been reached so far.

CSU leader Markus Söder has called for an additional hour of work per week in an ARD broadcast to boost Germany's economic growth. He advocates for quick reforms despite upcoming state elections. Further measures include abolishing telephone sick notes and phasing out retirement at 63.

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In response to last week's Finance Commission on Health report, German Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) plans to implement only select proposals. She rejects abolishing free co-insurance for childless spouses under six years old and advocates exemptions for caregiving relatives.

From January 1, 2027, prescriptions for care and medications by sector 3 liberal doctors will no longer be reimbursed by Assurance-maladie, under the 2026 social security financing law. The measure affects about 1,000 non-conventioned doctors out of more than 200,000 in practice. The profession is voicing anger over this restriction.

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The CDU economic council has proposed tax cuts and reductions in social benefits in its "Agenda for Workers," including removing dental coverage from health insurance. The plans face sharp criticism from politicians and associations, who label them unsocial and harmful to creating a two-tier medical system. Even within the CDU, there is discontent.

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