Healthcare
in Europe

Europe stands at a demographic tipping point. The triumph of increased life expectancy is colliding with persistently low fertility rates, creating a profound structural challenge for healthcare that current systems are ill-equipped to handle.

The Demographic Challenge

The scale of the demographic shift is staggering, translating directly into an unsustainable surge in dependency:
  • The number of people aged 80 and over is projected to nearly DOUBLE by 2050.
  • The overall dependency ratio is expected to surpass 55% by 2050.
This reality means a sharp increase in chronic care needs. People over 85 specifically require higher levels of nursing care and chronic disease management rather than acute medical interventions alone.

Unsustainable Costs

Europe is fighting a modern crisis with outdated structures. The consequences for hospitals are devastatingly clear:
Metric
Impact
Highlight
Hospital Visits
Patients over 75 go TWICE as often to the hospital.
2X Visits
Length of Stay
Patients over 75 stay TWICE as long.
2X Duration
Cost Allocation
Approximately 70% of national health spending is dedicated to people aged 65 and older.
70% of Spending
Hospital Overburden
45% of hospital beds in Europe are occupied by patients aged 65 and over.
45% Overload
Despite this escalating demand and high spending, the system has contracted: the European Union has reduced the number of hospital beds by 7% in a decade, leading to chronic long waiting lists.

New Problems, Old Solutions: The Efficiency Gap

The largest portion of healthcare expenditure remains focused on high-cost assets, creating a massive inefficiency:
Asset Type
Primary Function
Daily Cost per Bed
Efficiency
Hospital Visits
Acute Care, Surgery
€1,000
High Cost
Length of Stay
Post-Acute, Intermediate Care
€150
7X Cheaper
Cost Allocation
Long-Term Care, Dependency
€75–€100
10X Cheaper
 

The solution is not more high-cost hospitals, but more efficient infrastructure across the Care Continuum, according to social and healthcare needs.We need beds and we need them fast

To right-size the system and secure dignified care for the elderly, massive investment in specialized facilities is needed in the coming years:

Infrastructure Need
Investment Required (before 2030)
Highlight
Nursing Home Beds
1.1 – 1.3 MILLION new beds needed before 2030.
€150 BILLION
Hospital Beds
260,000 new hospital beds needed* 
€100 BILLION
Despite this escalating demand and high spending, the system has contracted: the European Union has reduced the number of hospital beds by 7% in a decade, leading to chronic long waiting lists.
 
*Primarily for rehab and post-acute care
Our Commitment: A Key Partner for the Solution
Healthcare Activos contributes to transforming the socio-sanitary sector by promoting and channeling sustainable and long-term private investment, generating a positive impact on the care system and improving people’s quality of life. We position ourselves as a strategic partner and a reference point in the investment and management of critical infrastructure across Europe:

Social
Responsibility

We view investment in intermediate and long-term care infrastructure not just as an opportunity, but as a social responsibility that alleviates pressure on public health systems and ensures dignified and efficient care for the population that needs it most.

Public-Private
Partnership (PPP)

We actively foster dialogue among operators, investors, and public administrations to develop structural solutions. Public-Private Collaboration is key to transforming the model, allowing for the optimization of resources and ensuring care is accessible, high-quality, and sustainable.

Driving
Structural Change

We recognize that Europe needs a clear and structured roadmap to effectively address the demographic challenge, and we provide the sector’s expertise to ensure policies are realistic and viable.

Sustainable
Financing

Investment in socio-sanitary infrastructure requires innovative financing schemes and a stable regulatory framework that encourages private participation without compromising the sustainability of the system.

Advancing toward a sustainable long-term care policy at the European level requires a comprehensive approach based on six key areas:

Defining a care continuum model:

A clear, shared definition of the care continuum is required across Europe to effectively align resources with the actual needs of the aging population, ensuring patients receive the right care at the right time.

Public-Private Collaboration:

Pooling Diverse Talent Around a Common Challenge: The scale of the demographic challenge requires the joint expertise and resources of both the public and private sectors.

Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) are essential for transforming and optimizing resources, bringing private sector efficiency and innovation to solve a public problem.

Moving forward with commitment toward quality and excellence in social healthcare:

The strategy must prioritize the patient’s needs and dignity, moving beyond minimum compliance to establish and enforce high quality standards. We need to adopt a common concept of socio-sanitary quality, define unified standards for both infrastructure and services, and use certifications (based on the AAAQ framework) to ensure excellence across the EU.

Financial Sustainability:

Adequate Incentives to Face the Challenge: To mobilize the necessary capital, the sector needs innovative financing schemes and adequate economic incentives. A stable regulatory framework is key to guaranteeing the financial sustainability of the system and attracting long-term private investment.

Data: anticipate, measure, and evaluate to design effective policies:

Effective policies must be built on robust and comparable data. Europe needs consistent and standardized metrics to anticipate demographic needs, measure the prevalence of chronic diseases, and evaluate the efficacy and efficiency of different care models.

The Member States:

A Central Component for European Success: While a European roadmap is essential, the strategy’s success ultimately depends on the commitment and effective implementation within each Member State. National governments must integrate the European vision into their local regulatory frameworks and financing models.