Analyse
The statement accurately reflects the **global consensus** that emerged during COVID-19: healthcare systems with strong public infrastructure (e.g., universal access, state-funded capacity) fared better in crisis response (WHO, 2021; OECD, 2020). Belgium’s own pandemic experience—where public hospitals bore the brunt of ICU demand while private providers played a supplementary role—supports the argument for *public good* framing. However, the claim is **partially reductive** because Belgium’s system (like many in Europe) relies on **public-private hybrid models** (e.g., reimbursement schemes for private practitioners, PPPs in long-term care), which complicates a strict binary of 'public good vs. market commodity.' De Sutter’s call for *resilient, accessible systems* is well-documented in post-pandemic EU policy (e.g., European Health Union proposals), but the exclusion of private-sector collaboration as a potential tool for resilience narrows the statement’s accuracy.
Achtergrond
Belgium’s healthcare system is **Bismarckian**—funded via social insurance (public) but delivered through a mix of public, private non-profit, and for-profit providers. During COVID-19, public hospitals handled ~70% of ICU beds (Sciensano, 2021), while private labs and pharmacies supported testing/vaccination logistics. The pandemic exposed vulnerabilities (e.g., staff shortages, fragmented governance) that spurred debates about **public investment vs. market efficiency**, mirroring global trends. De Sutter, as Deputy PM and Minister of Public Service, frequently advocated for strengthening public health infrastructure post-2020.
Samenvatting verdict
De Sutter’s framing of healthcare as a *public good*—rather than a market commodity—aligns with widespread policy discourse during the pandemic, but the claim oversimplifies the role of private-sector involvement in many healthcare systems, including Belgium’s mixed model.