Effective primary health care is the cornerstone for efficient, people‑centred, and equitable health systems. The COVID‑19 pandemic has shown that for health systems to be resilient in the face of health crises, strong primary and community health care – the frontline of all health systems – is essential.
In 2020, primary health care accounted for around 13% of all health spending on average across EU countries, ranging from 8% in Romania to around 18% in Lithuania (Figure 5.11). In most EU countries, primary health care spending as a share of total health spending remained relatively constant between 2015 and 2019 suggesting expenditure growth was in line with overall health spending. Yet, there was a slight drop in this proportion in 2020 as a result of strong growth in spending on inpatient care and a widespread reduction in dental care spending.
Analysing the composition of primary care spending reveals that around half of it refers to general outpatient care services on average across EU countries. A further 36% is related to dental care. Prevention services (9%) make up most of the remaining part. Looking at specific country examples, the share of general outpatient care in ambulatory settings is particularly high in Poland and Cyprus, reaching 13% of all health spending. In Germany, Austria, Romania and Luxembourg, spending on general outpatient care is much lower in relative terms, accounting for less than 5% of total health spending (Figure 5.11).
While only accounting for a moderate share of overall health spending, spending on prevention and public health increased significantly in some EU countries with the onset of the COVID‑19 crisis (see indicator “Health expenditure by type of good and service”). Yet, even after the strong one‑off growth in 2020 – mainly related to COVID‑19 public health management, extensive testing to detect the virus, pandemic surveillance and emergency co‑ordination, spending on preventive measure still only accounts for around 3% of overall health spending (Figure 5.12). While there is some variation in this proportion across EU countries – ranging from more than 5% in Italy, Finland and Luxembourg to around 1% in the Slovak Republic – it is generally perceived to be insufficient. An important lesson of the COVlD‑19 pandemic is that the health status of populations needs to be improved to make people more resilient against future health system emergencies. Cross-country analysis has shown that countries where the population was less obese and less likely to smoke generally had better health outcomes during the pandemic (OECD, forthcoming[1]).