Elsevier

Health Policy

Volume 120, Issue 10, October 2016, Pages 1177-1182
Health Policy

Health Reform Monitor
The Spanish long-term care system in transition: Ten years since the 2006 Dependency Act

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2016.08.012Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • The Dependency Act has changed the structure of the LTC system in Spain.

  • The economic and political context of the reform has adversely affected the performance of the LTC system.

  • A large number of people are evaluated to be eligible for benefits but do not receive them.

  • Monetary benefits have become usual practice rather than an exceptional resort.

  • The political consensus on which the LTC system rested has weakened since 2006.

Abstract

At the end of 2006, a new System for Promotion of Personal Autonomy and Assistance for Persons in a Situation of Dependency (SAAD) was established in Spain through the approval of the Act 39/2006 of 14th December (the Dependency Act, DA). The DA acknowledged the universal entitlement of Spanish citizens to social services. The recent economic crisis added degrees of uncertainty to several dimensions of the SAAD implementation process. Firstly, the political consensus on which its foundation rested upon has weakened. Secondly, implementation of the SAAD was hampered by several challenges that emerged in the context of the economic crisis. Thirdly, the so-called “dependency limbo” (i.e. the existence of a large number of people eligible for benefits but who do not receive them) has become a structural feature of the system. Finally, contrary to the spirit of the DA, monetary benefits have become the norm rather than a last resort. High heterogeneity across regions regarding the number of beneficiaries covered and services provided reveal the existence of regional inequity in access to long-term care services in the country. Broadly, the current evidence on the state of the SAAD suggests the need to improve the quality of governance, to enhance coordination between health and social systems, to increase the system's transparency, to foster citizens’ participation in decision-making and to implement a systematic monitoring of the system.

Keywords

Dependency
Long-term care
Social services
Economic crisis
Spain

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Open Access for this article is made possible by a collaboration between Health Policy and The European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies.