Understanding both the current performance of communicable disease control in Europe and the scale of the differences among systems is crucial to understanding its present performance and possible Europeanization. We attempt to identify the structure of authority in communicable disease control in each European Union (EU) member state. The primary sources of information were the competent bodies list posted on the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control website and the Health in Transition reports produced by the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies. Three key patterns emerge to answer the question of who does what. First, the landscape is full and crowded, with many actors involved. Second, the landscape is highly fragmented, with many organizations performing overlapping functions in each country. Third, regional patterns describe which types of organizations are assigned which functions. These full, fragmented, and regionally disparate systems show no signs of constituting a shared model. As a result, if there is an EU model of communicable disease control today, it is at most an aspiration.
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December 1, 2012
Issue Editors
Research Article|
December 01 2012
Mapping Communicable Disease Control in the European Union
J Health Polit Policy Law (2012) 37 (6): 935–954.
Citation
Heather A. Elliott, David K. Jones, Scott L. Greer; Mapping Communicable Disease Control in the European Union. J Health Polit Policy Law 1 December 2012; 37 (6): 935–954. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/03616878-1813781
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