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Symbiosis and Tension Between Profit and Purpose Across European Healthcare Systems

Emir Veledar (), Alejandra McGranaghan, Lejla Trulja and Peter McGranaghan
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Emir Veledar: The University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
Alejandra McGranaghan: Corvinus University School of Management
Lejla Trulja: University of Sarajevo
Peter McGranaghan: Semmelweis University

A chapter in Proceedings of the Kautz Conference on Business and Economics 2025 (KCBE 2025), 2026, pp 50-74 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract This paper examines the intricate relationship between profit-driven and purpose-driven healthcare actors within diverse European healthcare systems. It reviews how these entities coexist, identifying distinct patterns that shape their interaction and influence overall system performance. The analysis categorizes European countries into three models: Privately-Integrated Systems, Mixed-Governed Systems, and Public-Led Systems. Key findings indicate that while European healthcare is fundamentally grounded in principles of equity and universal access, the involvement of for-profit actors varies significantly. In Privately-Integrated Systems, stable coexistence is observed where roles and reimbursements are clearly defined and guided by aligned objectives. Mixed-Governed Systems balance access and flexibility through robust regulation and public funding. Conversely, Public-Led Systems, despite limited direct integration, increasingly rely on private capacity in specific areas, raising questions about efficiency and equity. The paper concludes that dynamics are not binary but reflect national priorities, institutional maturity, and policy design, critically shaping how effectively public and private sectors can serve patient-centered outcomes.

Keywords: for-profit actors; health policy; non-profit systems; public-private healthcare; service delivery (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
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DOI: 10.2991/978-94-6239-658-6_4

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