UNIVERSAL ENTITLEMENT UNDER STRAIN: THE LONG-TERM IMPACT OF ISRAELS NATIONAL HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM ON HEALTH SYSTEM MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION
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Abstract
Background: Israels National Health Insurance (NHI) reform of 1994-1995 established a universal statutory entitlement to a defined basket of health services and reorganized the health system around a regulated pluralist framework. This article re-examines the reform not as a one-time legislative achievement, but as a long-run problem of health-system management and organizational stewardship. Methods: The study uses a structured secondary policy-analysis design. To improve methodological transparency, the analysis is organized through an explicit analytical framework that links five dimensions-universal entitlement, financing architecture, basket governance, institutional role allocation, and the public-private boundary of access-to three forms of long-term strain: fiscal, operational, and normative. The source base combines the statutory framework, foundational reform scholarship, later policy and evaluation studies, and the most recent official comparative indicators published by the OECD and the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies.
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How to Cite This Article
Dvir Levin (2026); UNIVERSAL ENTITLEMENT UNDER STRAIN: THE LONG-TERM IMPACT OF ISRAELS NATIONAL HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM ON HEALTH SYSTEM MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION , Int. J. of Adv. Res., 14 (04), 180-189, ISSN 2320-5407. DOI: https://doi.org/10.21474/IJAR01/23178
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