An ageing population and tighter state budgets are putting pressure on health services – making the role of health co-ops more important, a conference session was told.
The session outlined research by the International Health Co-operative Organisation (IHCO) and the European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises (EURICSE) into 15 health co-ops, which is due for release at the end of this month.
Gianluca Salvatore, chief executive of EURICSE, said technology would also bring major change to health services. He highlighted Chinese diagnostic app Ping An Good Doctor as an example of how consumers are replacing traditional services with digital ones.
"In the not too distant future, consumers can access discrete health services from range of providers,” he said, predicting intensified competition as players like Amazon and Google disrupt the sector.
And he warned this would bring "social polarisation - between a minority who can afford such services and the majority who will be in difficulty. The co-op model must focus on the people who will find it problematic to approach this new healthcare system."
The survey of co-ops produced four key findings, he added: health co-ops are widespread in all studied countries; can adjust to changing conditions; are on the rise; and have competitive advantages.
But their potential is "heavily underestimated" by policy makers, he warned.