quarta-feira, 22 de julho de 2015

Torta de maçã dinamarquesa Karoline

                                                                         



Torta de Maçã Dinamarquesa Karoline

Ingredientes:

  • 150 gramas de manteiga sem sal
  • 150 gramas de açúcar
  • 2 ovos
  • 125 gramas de farinha peneirada
  • 75 gramas de semolina peneirada
  • 4 maçãs médias ou 3 maçãs grandes
  • 25 gramas de manteiga sem sal derretida

Modo de fazer:

Bata a manteiga com o açúcar. Adicione os ovos ligeiramente batidos aos poucos. Adicione a farinha misturada com a semolina aos poucos. Espalhe esta massa firme em forma redonda com base removível untada.

Pré-aqueça o forno (220°). Descasque as maçãs e corte-as no formato de fatias em meia-lua. Pressione as fatias na massa. Pincele com a manteiga derretida. Asse por aproximadamente 30 minutos ou até que as maçãs estejam cozidas.

No inverno, sirva a torta aquecida com uma porção de chantilly.

terça-feira, 23 de junho de 2015

Public-Private Partnerships in the Brazilian Health Sector

Project Regarding Public-Private Partnerships in the Brazilian Health Sector

Fernanda Kellner de Oliveira Palermo
Public Policies Researcher

Summary

Due to recurring problems in the delivery of services in health care, either public or private, and to prevent these systems from collapsing in the near future, this project’s main goal is to propose to the general public the extinction of operators of health insurance, whose commitment is solely on profit, by replacing them by medical societies fundamentally based on professional ethics, which will be able to form associations to act as private partners in contracts of public-private partnerships in the public health sector. In these contracts, the ones who become insured will be shareholders of funds through securitization models.

The general public is kindly requested to post opinions, contributions, considerations and criticisms after reading the following explanations:

1. Current scenario and example of implementation

Brazilian Federal Law No. 11,709/2004, Lei de Parcerias Público-Privadas [1], establishes general principles, rules and procedures to streamline public procurement and government contracts based on PPPs. These general rules are binding to the federal, state, federal district and local levels. Since 2004, this instrument has been applied to several areas where public services are delivered, including healthcare.   
After many years of enactment of the statute and due to the analysis of a sample implementation in the area of health, it is possible to point out its advantages, which are analyzed by Tomas Anker and Bruno Ramos Pereira[2] as follows:

·         The "packaging of services" (or bundling) centers under the leadership of a single service provider responsible for the delivery of various scopes necessary for the supply of a given good or service;
·         The establishment of performance indicators output-based, i.e. based on goals and results;
·         Greater longevity of PPP vis-à-vis a traditional contract;
·         The private partner cannot by contract invoke the need for more financial resources for alleged extra costs or even claim the need for further term;
·         Attractiveness of other segments of the economy that traditionally do not have interest in other contracts of public administration;
·         The tonic of a PPP contract is to allocate the risk to the partner who can best manage it;
·         The adoption of information systems may be required. It may create greater richness of analysis, including more accuracy in operating costs;
·         PPP enables maintenance, conservation and renovation of the technological park of clinical equipment within a single contract.


The authors mentioned above[3] bring up an example of implementation of a PPP contract in health area, pointing out that the "Suburb Hospital, whose contract is already signed and in full implementation was the first PPP in Brazil's health system within the Federal Law No. 11,079/04, the Federal law of PPPs".

(Suburb Hospital in Salvador - Bahia n.d.)[4]

Owing to this important milestone in the State of Bahia and because it is a successful example, it is relevant to refer to some features of its implementation explained by José Fucs[5]:

·         Challenge: open a new public hospital, with quality services and low investment from the government;
·         Solution: grant to private initiative the administration, operation and hospital equipment;
·         Result: good standard of assistance to the population and cost 10% less than other public hospitals to the State.
 
  
2. Restructuring the provision of healthcare services in Brazil

The current project aims at presenting stages of implementation for a new modeling regarding the provision of healthcare services in Brazil. Based on the classification presented by Tomas Anker and Bruno Ramos Pereira[6], it is possible to outline public-private partnership contracts whose contractors belong to three sectors of activity: public sector, private sector and philanthropic entities. Accordingly, the extinction of the health plan operator whose motivation is based strictly on obtaining profit occurs. The authors present three forms of PPP development in the area of health, in verbis:

·         PPP can be developed within a less interventionist manner: only non-clinical activities are transferred, such as hospitality services and the construction, acquisition and maintenance of hospital infrastructure;
·         Intermediate manner: one can also think about transferring logistics of medicines and materials, significant portions of the provision of services;
·         Those who desire a more integral transformation can think of complete PPP contracts: clinical activities in addition to supporting activities are transferred (“bata-blanca” project).


By updating data of the National Register of Health Establishments (CNES), which releases the current infrastructure and operating conditions of the medical institutions in all spheres, it is possible to carry out a nationwide public policy for the promotion of public-private partnerships in healthcare according to the successful case implemented in the Suburb Hospital in the State of Bahia in regions where public hospitals are indispensable.
In regions where the largest portions of the population with sufficient income to afford health insurance costs are concentrated, it is necessary to gradually implement PPP contracts in which the service users have the possibility of becoming shareholders of investment funds created by financial institutions. Such an arrangement arises from an under-financed system, generated by the inefficiency of its management. This specific issue is analyzed by Rafael Andreazza Daros[7], who points out the following remarks regarding the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS):

The way the system is financed impoverishes precisely those whom it seeks to help and brings down the quality of the service, once the money available for each treatment becomes scarcer each time a patient is taken care of. Even worse, regulations to prevent the exodus of doctors to the private system hinder competition and make treatments more expensive.
Another harmful effect of all that paternalism is the destruction of the stimulus to charity, sense of citizenship and responsibility of citizens.


Through a system in which users are encouraged to contribute with accessible cost, as well as the possibility of monitoring, controlling and participating in management, it becomes possible to keep establishments managed by medical societies with the support of philanthropic entities, in public-private partnership contracts structured in accordance with the aforementioned classification. Due to the transfer of public assets to these establishments, they must provide medical assistance services to low income population, in cooperation with the network of existing public establishments in the locality.
Every medical institution of the country should stimulate the use of the National Health Card for an adequate monitoring system. The goal is to extend this card to users of health plans so that the system can identify the status of each patient, with a view to efficiency related to the compensation for private institutions with regard to services provided to the public health system users. It is possible to create a health system in which healthy practices and health campaigns are encouraged, if the population becomes aware of the costs of the services provided and has the option to become user of affordable health plans, enabling the targeting of public investment in health care to regions of the country in which it is indispensable.
In case it is possible to overcome the challenges represented by pressing issues such as the obstacle of double taxation and the possibility to confer tax immunity to charities in the context of PPPs, there will be mechanisms to target the long-term achievement of an efficient system of universal health care, whose model can be applied in other countries or development contexts. Moreover, risk allocation will be better targeted after the analysis of the achievements during the contract’s life-cycle.







[1]   Lei No. 11.079, de 30 de dezembro de 2004, D.O.U. 31.12.2004 (Brazil).
[2]   Tomas Anker & Bruno Ramos Pereira, O atual cenário das PPPs no setor de saúde pública no Brasil: potencialidades, desafios e as primeiras experiências em âmbito estadual [The current scenario of PPPs in the public health sector in Brazil: opportunities, challenges and early experiences statewide], in Parcerias público-privadas: experiências, desafios e propostas[Public-private partnerships: experiences, challenges and proposals] 163 (LTC eds. 2013)(author’s translation) passim.
[3]    Id. at 174 (author’s translation).
[4]   Suburb Hospital in Salvador-Bahia, n.d. photograph, viewed Jun. 18, 2015 http://www.desenbahia.ba.gov.br/Noticias_Ultimas_Noticias_02.aspx?id=2218.
[5]    José Fucs, Em Salvador, um hospital público que parece privado [In Salvador, a public hospital that looks like a private one], available at http://epoca.globo.com/tempo/noticia/2014/04/em-salvador-um-bhospital-publicob-que-parece-privado.html (last visited Jun. 20, 2015) (author’s translation).
[6] Anker & Pereira, supra note 2, at 168 (author’s translation).

[7]   Rafael Andreazza Daros, Como o SUS está destruindo a saúde dos brasileiros [Ways that SUS is using to destroy Brazilians’ health], available at http://www.mises.org.br/Article.aspx?id=1849 (last visited Jun. 21, 2015) (author’s translation).