161 results
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2. Integrated Health and Social Care in the United States: A Decade of Policy Progress.
- Author
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SANDHU, SAHIL, SHARMA, ANU, CHOLERA, RUSHINA, and BETTGER, JANET PRVU
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MEDICAID ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH care reform ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL finance - Abstract
Introduction: Over the last decade in the United States (US), the burden of chronic disease, health care costs, and fragmented care delivery have increased at alarming rates. To address these challenges, policymakers have prioritized new payment and delivery models to incentivize better integrated health and social services. Policy practice: This paper outlines three major national and state policy initiatives to improve integrated health and social care over the last ten years in the US, with a focus on the Medicaid public insurance program for Americans with low incomes. Activities supported by these initiatives include screening patients for social risks in primary care clinics; building new cross-sector collaborations; financing social care with healthcare dollars; and sharing data across health, social and community services. Stakeholders from the private sector, including health systems and insurers, have partnered to advance and scale these initiatives. This paper describes the implementation and effectiveness of such efforts, and lessons learned from translating policy to practice. Discussion and Conclusion: National policies have catalyzed initiatives to test new integrated health and social care models, with the ultimate goal of improving population health and decreasing costs. Preliminary findings demonstrated the need for validated measures of social risk, engagement across levels of organizational leadership and frontline staff, and greater flexibility from national policymakers in order to align incentives across sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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3. Belgium's Healthcare System: The Way Forward to Address the Challenges of the 21st Century: Comment on "Integration or Fragmentation of Health Care? Examining Policies and Politics in a Belgian Case Study".
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De Maeseneer, Jan and Galle, Anna
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INTEGRATED health care delivery ,TWENTY-first century ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,INTEGRATIVE medicine - Abstract
In this paper we have tried, starting from the results of an analysis of the functioning of integrated care in the Belgian Health System by Martens et al, to design a strategy that could contribute to better addressing the challenges of the 21st century in Belgium. We proposed health system changes at the macro-, meso- and micro-level. We focused on health policy development and organization of care, emphasizing the importance of a shift from a hospital-centric towards a primary care based approach. Special attention was paid to the need for institutional reforms, in order to facilitate the further development of interprofessional integrated care, that focuses on the achievement of the life-goals of a person. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Medicine and management in European hospitals: a comparative overview.
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Kirkpatrick, Ian, Kuhlmann, Ellen, Hartley, Kathy, Dent, Mike, and Lega, Federico
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MEDICINE ,HEALTH services administration ,MEDICAL care ,HOSPITALS ,LEADERSHIP ,NEW public management ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH care reform ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PUBLIC hospitals ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL offices ,OFFICE management - Abstract
Background: Since the early 1980s all European countries have given priority to reforming the management of health services. A distinctive feature of these reforms has also been the drive to co-opt professionals themselves into the management of services, taking on full time or part time (hybrid) management or leadership roles. However, although these trends are well documented in the literature, our understanding of the nature and impact of reforms and how they are re-shaping the relationship between medicine and management remains limited. Most studies have tended to be nationally specific, located within a single discipline and focused primarily on describing new management practices. This article serves as an Introduction to a special issue of BMC Health Services Research which seeks to address these concerns. It builds on the work of a European Union funded COST Action (ISO903) which ran between 2009 and 2013, focusing specifically on the changing relationship between medicine and management in a European context.Main Text: Prior to describing the contributions to the special issue, this Introduction sets the scene by exploring four main questions which have characterised much of the recent literature on medicine and management. First is the question of what we understand by the changing relationship between medicine and management and in particular which this means for the emergence of so called 'hybrid' clinical leader roles? A second question concerns the forces that have driven change, in particular those relating to the wider project of management reforms. Third, we raise questions of how medical professionals have responded to these changes and what factors have shaped their responses. Lastly we consider what some of the outcomes of greater medical involvement in management and leadership might be, both in terms of intended and unintended outcomes.Conclusions: The paper concludes by summarising the contributions to the special issue and highlighting the need to extend research in this area by focusing more on comparative dimensions of change. It is argued that future research would also benefit theoretically by drawing together insights from health policy and management literatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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5. Challenges in turning a great idea into great health policy: the case of integrated care.
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Raus, Kasper, Mortier, Eric, and Eeckloo, Kristof
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HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: In the organization of health care and health care systems, there is an increasing trend towards integrated care. Policy-makers from different countries are creating policies intended to promote cooperation and collaboration between health care providers, while facilitating the integration of different health care services. Hopes are high, as such collaboration and integration of care are believed to save resources and improve quality. However, policy-makers are likely to encounter various challenges and limitations when attempting to turn these great ideas into effective policies. In this paper, we look into these challenges.Main Body: We argue that the organization of health care and integrated care is of public concern, and should thus be of crucial interest to policy-makers. We highlight three challenges or limitations likely to be encountered by policy-makers in integrated care. These are: (1) conceptual challenges; (2) empirical/methodological challenges; and (3) resource challenges. We will argue that it is still unclear what integrated care means and how we should measure it. 'Integrated care' is a single label that can refer to a great number of different processes. It can describe the integration of care for individual patients, the integration of services aimed at particular patient groups or particular conditions, or it can refer to institution-wide collaborations between different health care providers. We subsequently argue that health reform inevitably possesses a political context that should be taken into account. We also show how evidence supporting integrated care may not guarantee success in every context. Finally, we will discuss how promoting collaboration and integration might actually demand more resources. In the final section, we look at three different paradigmatic examples of integrated care policy: Norway, the UK's NHS, and Belgium.Conclusions: There seems widespread agreement that collaboration and integration are the way forward for health care and health care systems. Nevertheless, we argue that policy-makers should remain careful; they should carefully consider what they hope to achieve, the amount of resources they are willing to invest, and how they will evaluate the success of their policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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6. Austria's Long-Term Care System: Challenges and Policy Responses.
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TRUKESCHITZ, BIRGIT, ÖSTERLE, AUGUST, and SCHNEIDER, ULRIKE
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HEALTH policy ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care use ,GOVERNMENT aid ,LONG-term health care ,HEALTH planning - Abstract
Approaches to design comprehensive support systems for people in need of long-term care (LTC) have appeared on the policy agenda of European countries from the 1990ies. Austria was one of the first to implement such a system separate from health care. In this last significant expansion of its social protection system, the country established a universal and tax-funded LTC system, departing from Austria's Bismarckian tradition while carrying along the familialist logic and federalist structure in this policy field. Thirty years later, Austria now joins other countries in creating solutions to important contemporary challenges by discussing another major revamp of its LTC system. This paper renders a country case study to explain the development of Austrian LTC policies in greater depth and from a dynamic perspective. The two-step approach, starts with presenting the logics and major building blocks of Austria's LTC system, and provides an update on its benefits and services. The second part identifies and discusses a raft of current and planned measures for three areas that appear critical in terms of future proofing LTC: (i) responses to staffing challenges, (ii) policy pilots to support informal carers, and finally, (iii) the role of digital transformation for LTC in Austria. This showcase exercise fosters policy learning and thus supports innovation and refinement of LTC systems. It could also serve as a futile starting point for comparative LTC policy research that moves beyond the outer hull of care-regime typologies to explore more specific system features and policy interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. The implementation of large-scale health system reform in identification, access and treatment of eating disorders in Australia.
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Maguire, Sarah and Maloney, Danielle
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EATING disorders ,SYSTEM identification ,MEDICAL personnel ,PERCEPTUAL disorders ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
Background: It seems to be a truth universally acknowledged that pathways to care for people with eating disorders are inconsistent and difficult to navigate. This may, in part, be a result of the complex nature of the illness comprising both mental and medical ill-health across a broad range of severity. Care therefore is distributed across all parts of the health system resulting in many doors into the system, distributed care responsibility, without well developed or integrated pathways from one part of the system to another. Efforts in many parts of the world to redesign health service delivery for this illness group are underway, each dependent upon the local system structures, geographies served, funding sources and workforce availability. Methods: In NSW—the largest populational jurisdiction in Australia, and over three times the size of the UK—the government embarked six years ago on a program of whole-of-health system reform to embed identification and treatment of people with eating disorders across the lifespan and across the health system, which is largely publicly funded. Prior to this, eating disorders had not been considered a 'core' part of service delivery within the health system, meaning many patients received no treatment or bounced in and out of 'doorways'. The program received initial funding of $17.6 million ($12.5 million USD) increasing to $29.5 million in phase 2 and the large-scale service and workforce development program has been implemented across 15 geographical districts spanning almost one million square kilometres servicing 7.75 million people. Conclusions: In the first five years of implementation there has been positive effects of the policy change and reform on all three service targets—emergency departments presentations, hospital admissions and community occasions of service as well as client hours. This paper describes the strategic process of policy and practice change, utilising well documented service design and change strategies and principles with relevance for strategic change within health systems in general. Plain English summary: This review outlines a $30 million health system reform to eating disorder treatment implemented by the NSW State Government six years ago which has seen large-scale service and workforce development across 15 geographical districts. This spans almost one million square kilometres and services 7.75 million people in Australia. The reform is very large in scale and is now in its second phase of implementation. Here outlined is the strategic process of policy and practice change of the entire reform and initial findings from an external review of phase one, which demonstrates positive effects on all three service targets—emergency departments presentations, hospital admissions and community occasions of service—including increased rates of treatment provision, improved perception of eating disorders amongst health professionals, improved pathway options and better communication within multidisciplinary teams. This type of whole-of-health system government led reform has relevance and learnings for health systems internationally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Data Envelopment Analysis for Evaluating Serbia's Health Care System.
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Mitrović, Zorica, Vujošević, Mirko, and Savić, Gordana
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MEDICAL care ,DATA envelopment analysis ,MEDICAL decision making ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH care reform ,GROUP decision making - Abstract
This paper is an attempt to measure and evaluate the efficiency of the health care system of Serbia in comparison with countries in the European region using the data envelopment analysis (DEA), one of the most important methods to model and measure the efficiency of health care systems. The research included the sample of 42 countries representing decision-making units (DMU), divided into two groups of countries with similar levels of development. To assess the performance of those DMUs we used three outputs representing mortality rates and three inputs representing health care expenditure and health care human resources. In the presence of undesirable outputs, the proposed model was Bad Output Model with simple modifications The analysis showed that 19 out of 42 countries are relatively efficient in providing health services and a close examination of these efficient countries shows that most countries are countries with low input values On the other hand, Serbia's health system is ranked the 15th out of 21 analyzed systems within its group, with a gap of 37% in comparison with the first ones ranked. The usual explanation is that the health system in Serbia has been affected, during time, by the lack of reforms, by poor funding as well as by the lack of interest of the authorities in establishing a long-term strategy; further analysis, however, are needed to show the reasons for this state and what steps should be done to improve the current state. We find that this paper could be useful to both public health practitioners and researchers especially because due to its complexity in undertaking, the measuring efficiency at the system level has recently been applied only in few studies and this research will be a significant contribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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9. Insights gained from a systematic reanalysis of a successful model‐facilitated change process in health care.
- Author
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Holmström, Paul, Hallberg, Stefan, Björk‐Eriksson, Thomas, Lindberg, Jesper, Olsson, Caroline, Bååthe, Fredrik, and Davidsen, Pål
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COMPUTER simulation ,HEALTH policy ,MATHEMATICAL models ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH care reform ,QUALITATIVE research ,MEDICAL care research ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,THEORY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH care teams ,SYSTEM analysis ,ACTION research ,QUALITY assurance - Abstract
Health care is a complex system with multiprofessional staff and multiple patient care pathways. Time pressure and minimal margins for error make it challenging to implement new policies or procedures, no matter how desirable. Changes in health care also requires the participation of the staff. System dynamics (SD) simulations can lead to shared systems understanding and allows for the development and testing of new scenarios in silico before implementing solutions. However, research shows that the actual implementation rate of simulations is low. This paper presents a reanalysis of a successful change project in health care combining SD principles with basic action research (AR) premises. The analysis was done by a multidisciplinary research group using qualitative methodology and identifies that a fruitful combination of AR inquiry and SD modelling potentially can improve implementation rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. Determinants analysis of outpatient service utilisation in Georgia: can the approach help inform benefit package design?
- Author
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Gotsadze, George, Wenze Tang, Shengelia, Natia, Akaki Zoidze, Tang, Wenze, and Zoidze, Akaki
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HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care costs ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,MEDICAL care ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,CROSS-sectional method ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Background: The healthcare financing reforms initiated by the Government of Georgia in 2007 have positively affected inpatient service utilisation and enhanced financial protection, especially for the poor, but they have failed to facilitate outpatient service use among chronic patients. Non-communicable diseases significantly affect Georgia's ageing population. Consequently, in this paper, we look at the evidence emerging from determinants analysis of outpatient service utilisation and if the finding can help identify possible policy choices in Georgia, especially regarding benefit package design for individuals with chronic conditions.Methods: We used Andersen's behavioural model of health service utilisation to identify the critical determinants that affect outpatient service use. A multinomial logistic regression was carried out with complex survey design using the data from two nationally representative cross-sectional population-based health utilisation and expenditure surveys conducted in Georgia in 2007 and 2010, which allowed us to assess the relationship between the determinants and outpatient service use.Results: The study revealed the determinants that significantly impede outpatient service use. Low income, 45- to 64-year-old Georgian males with low educational attainment and suffering from a chronic health problem have the lowest odds for service use compared to the rest of the population.Conclusions: Using Andersen's behavioural model and assessing the determinants of outpatient service use has the potential to inform possible policy responses, especially those driving services use among chronic patients. The possible policy responses include reducing financial access barriers with the help of public subsidies for sub-groups of the population with the lowest access to care; focusing/expanding state-funded benefits for the most prevalent chronic conditions, which are responsible for the greatest disease burden; or supporting chronic disease management programs for the most prevalent chronic diseases and for special age groups aimed at the timely detection, education and management of chronic patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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11. A comprehensive approach to women's health: lessons from the Mexican health reform.
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Frenk, Julio, G¢mez-Dant‚s, Octavio, and Langer, Ana
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WOMEN'S health ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: This paper discusses the way in which women's health concerns were addressed in Mexico as part of a health system reform. Discussion: The first part sets the context by examining the growing complexity that characterizes the global health field, where women's needs occupy center stage. Part two briefly describes a critical conceptual evolution, i.e. from maternal to reproductive to women's health. In the third and last section, the novel "women and health" (W&H) approach and its translation into policies and programs in the context of a structural health reform in Mexico is discussed. W&H simultaneously focuses on women's health needs and women's critical roles as both formal and informal providers of health care, and the links between these two dimensions. Summary: The most important message of this paper is that broad changes in health systems offer the opportunity to address women's health needs through innovative approaches focused on promoting gender equality and empowering women as drivers of change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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12. What is 'Global Health Diplomacy'? A Conceptual Review.
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Lee, Kelley and Smith, Richard
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MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,DIPLOMACY ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,HEALTH care reform - Abstract
While global health diplomacy (GHD) has attracted growing attention, accompanied by hopes of its potential to progress global health and/or foreign policy goals, the concept remains imprecise. This paper finds the term has largely been used normatively to describe its expected purpose rather than distinct features. This paper distinguishes between traditional and "new diplomacy", with the latter defined by its global context, diverse actors and innovative processes. A more concise definition of GHG supports the development of a research agenda for strengthening the evidence base in this rapidly evolving area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
13. Institutionalized Healthcare Reform in Germany? Error Correction or Political Strategy?
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Pannowitsch, Sylvia
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HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH planning ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
Copyright of German Policy Studies/Politikfeldanalyse is the property of Southern Public Administration Education Foundation and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2009
14. District decision-making for health in low-income settings: a feasibility study of a data-informed platform for health in India, Nigeria and Ethiopia.
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Avan, Bilal Iqbal, Berhanu, Della, Umar, Nasir, Wickremasinghe, Deepthi, and Schellenberg, Joanna
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HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,DECISION making ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH policy ,DEVELOPING countries ,FOCUS groups ,HEALTH planning ,MEDICAL care use ,POVERTY ,PILOT projects ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Low-resource settings often have limited use of local data for health system planning and decision-making. To promote local data use for decision-making and priority setting, we propose an adapted framework: a data-informed platform for health (DIPH) aimed at guiding coordination, bringing together key data from the public and private sectors on inputs and processes. In working to transform this framework from a concept to a health systems initiative, we undertook a series of implementation research activities including background assessment, testing and scaling up of the intervention. This first paper of four reports the feasibility of the approach in a district health systems context in five districts of India, Nigeria and Ethiopia. We selected five districts using predefined criteria and in collaboration with governments. After scoping visits, an in-depth field visit included interviews with key health stakeholders, focus group discussions with service-delivery staff and record review. For analysis, we used five dimensions of feasibility research based on the TELOS framework: technology and systems, economic, legal and political, operational and scheduling feasibility. We found no standardized process for data-based district level decision-making, and substantial obstacles in all three countries. Compared with study areas in Ethiopia and Nigeria, the health system in Uttar Pradesh is relatively amenable to the DIPH, having relative strengths in infrastructure, technological and technical expertise, and financial resources, as well as a district-level stakeholder forum. However, a key challenge is the absence of an effective legal framework for engagement with India's extensive private health sector. While priority-setting may depend on factors beyond better use of local data, we conclude that a formative phase of intervention development and pilot-testing is warranted as a next step. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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15. Cross-sector collaboration to reduce health inequalities: a qualitative study of local collaboration between health care, social services, and other sectors under health system reforms in England.
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Alderwick, Hugh, Hutchings, Andrew, and Mays, Nicholas
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HEALTH equity ,MEDICAL care ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH policy ,COMMUNITY organization - Abstract
Background: Policymakers across countries promote cross-sector collaboration as a route to improving health and health equity. In England, major health system reforms in 2022 established 42 integrated care systems (ICSs)—area-based partnerships between health care, social care, public health, and other sectors—to plan and coordinate local services. ICSs cover the whole of England and have been given explicit policy objectives to reduce health inequalities, alongside other national priorities. Methods: We used qualitative methods to understand how local health care and social services organizations are collaborating to reduce health inequalities under England's reforms. We conducted in-depth interviews between August and December 2022—soon after the reforms were implemented—with 32 senior leaders from NHS, social care, public health, and community-based organizations in three ICSs experiencing high levels of socioeconomic deprivation. We used a framework based on international evidence on cross-sector collaboration to help analyse the data. Results: Leaders described strong commitment to working together to reduce health inequalities, but faced a combination of conceptual, cultural, capacity, and other challenges in doing so. A mix of factors shaped local collaboration—from how national policy aims are defined and understood, to the resources and relationships among local organizations to deliver them. These factors interact and have varying influence. The national policy context played a dominant role in shaping local collaboration experiences—frequently making it harder not easier. Organizational restructuring to establish ICSs also caused major disruption, with unintended effects on the partnership working it aimed to promote. Conclusions: The major influences on cross-sector collaboration in England mirror key areas identified in international research, offering opportunities for learning between countries. But our data highlight the pervasive—frequently perverse—influence of national policy on local collaboration in England. National policymakers risked undermining their own reforms. Closer alignment between policy, process, and resources to reduce health inequalities is likely needed to avoid policy failure as ICSs evolve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. HEALTH FINANCING POLICY REFORM TRENDS: THE CASE OF LATVIA.
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PĒTERSONE, MĀRA, KETNERS, KĀRLIS, and ERINS, INGARS
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HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,RURAL health ,MEDICAL care ,REFORMS - Abstract
Health financing policy is one of major challenges for any health care system. The Latvian health care system faces challenges and financial pressures that threaten its long-term sustainability and the values of solidarity. The goal of this paper is to conduct the review of the financing resources of the health care in Latvia, to evaluate the development of the health care reform in Latvia and provide recommendations for future changes. To achieve the goal of the research, comparative analysis and methods of theoretical research, as well as for data processing and analysis, the statistical analysis methods are used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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17. Current performance and future trends of integrated care: a scientometric analysis.
- Author
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Li Zhong, Zhang Liang, and Zhang Yan
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MENTAL health services ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,PRIMARY care ,SCIENCE databases - Abstract
Background: Integrated care has gained popularity in recent decades. This study aims to explore its global progress, current foci, and future trends. Methods: We conducted a scientometric analysis. Data (including subject categories, countries/territories, institutions, journals, citations, and author keywords) were exported from the Web of Science database. Publication number and citations, co-authorship between countries and institutions, co-occurrence of author keywords and cluster analysis were calculated with Histcite12.03.07 and VOSviewer1.6.4. Results: A total of 6127 articles were retrieved from 1997 to 2016. Results indicate the following: (1) The USA, UK, and Canada led research with the most publications, citations, and productive institutions. (2) The top 10 cited papers and journals (such as BMC Health Services Research) are crucial for the knowledge distribution. (3) The 50 author keywords were clustered into five groups, including digital medicine and e-health, community health and chronic disease management, primary health care and mental health, health care system for infectious diseases, health care reform and qualitative research, social care and health policy services. Conclusions: This paper confirmed that integrated care is undergoing rapid development with more categories involved and additional collaboration networks established. Various research foci are forming like economic incentives mechanism for integration, e-health data mining, systematically quantitative study. Moreover, an urgent need exists for the development of the performance measurement for policies and models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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18. Tender puentes: lecciones globales desde México sobre políticas de salud basadas en evidencias.
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Frenk, Julio
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HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,EQUALITY ,MICROCOSM & macrocosm ,MALNUTRITION ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,SOCIAL security - Abstract
Copyright of Salud Pública de México is the property of Instituto Nacional de Salud Publica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
19. Healthc are transparency: opportunity or mirage.
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Jaffe, Russell, Nash, Robert A., Ash, Richard, Schwartz, Norman, Corish, Robert, Born, Tammy, and Lazarus, Harold
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MEDICAL care ,HEALTH planning ,HEALTH services administration ,HEALTH care reform ,PUBLIC health ,PUBLIC health administration ,HEALTH policy ,NURSING services - Abstract
Purpose – Healthcare is an ever-growing segment of the American economy. Transparency facilitates better decision-making and better outcomes measures. The purpose of this paper is to present the human and economic results of increasing transparency. Design/methodology/approach – The ASIMP Working Group on Healthcare Transparency represents a diverse yet conscilient group of practitioners, researchers, regulators, economists, and academics. Given the need for re-envisioning healthcare to include more accountability, evidence of efficacy and transparency, this integrative medicine (ASIMP) working group is suitable to address the above purpose. Findings – Substantial opportunity exists to reduce morbidity and mortality, suffering and excess death, unnecessary costs and risks. Greater transparency facilitates the transition to safer, more effective, more humane healthcare. Research limitations/implications – This paper starts from a need to improve clinical outcomes and value for resources devoted. Best efforts of a national working group are presented. The implications of the report, when tested, will determine the enduring value of this work. Practical implications – Consumers and business, administrators and practitioners can improve care at lower cost by increasing transparency. This will accelerate the diffusion of effective approaches that are not yet in widespread use despite replication of efficacy. Originality/value – This is the first time an integrative approach has been compared with conventional healthcare models, particularly with regard to the role of transparency in heaithcare management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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20. Are scientific research outputs aligned with national policy makers' priorities? A case study of tuberculosis in Cambodia.
- Author
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Boudarene, Lydia, James, Richard, Coker, Richard, and Khan, Mishal S.
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TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,DRUG therapy for tuberculosis ,TUBERCULOSIS prevention ,ENDOWMENT of research ,EXECUTIVES ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HIV infections ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL research ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MIXED infections - Abstract
With funding for tuberculosis (TB) research decreasing, and the high global disease burden persisting, there are calls for increased investment in TB research. However, justification of such investments is questionable, when translation of research outputs into policy and health care improvements remains a challenge for TB and other diseases. Using TB in Cambodia as a case study, we investigate how evidence needs of national policy makers are addressed by topics covered in research publications. We first conducted a systematic review to compile all studies on TB in Cambodia published since 2000. We then identified priority areas in which evidence for policy and programme planning are required from the perspective of key national TB control stakeholders. Finally, results from the literature review were analysed in relation to the priority research areas for national policy makers to assess overlap and highlight gaps in evidence. Priority research areas were: TB-HIV co-infection; childhood TB; multidrug resistant TB (MDR-TB); and universal and equitable access to quality diagnosis and treatment. On screening 1687 unique papers retrieved from our literature search, 253 were eligible publications focusing on TB in Cambodia. Of these, only 73 (29%) addressed one of the four priority research areas. Overall, 30 (11%), five (2%), seven (2%) and 37 (14%) studies reported findings relevant to TB-HIV, childhood TB, MDR-TB and access to quality diagnosis and treatment respectively. Our analysis shows that a small proportion of the research outputs in Cambodia address priority areas for informing policy and programme planning. This case study illustrates that there is substantial room for improvement in alignment between research outputs and evidence gaps that national policy makers would like to see addressed; better coordination between researchers, funders and policy makers' on identifying priority research topics may increase the relevance of research findings to health policies and programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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21. Progress and outcomes of health systems reform in the United Arab Emirates: a systematic review.
- Author
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Koornneef, Erik, Robben, Paul, and Blair, Iain
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META-analysis ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH insurance ,MEDICAL economics ,QUALITY assurance standards ,MEDICAL care standards ,HEALTH services accessibility ,LIFE expectancy ,MEDICAL care ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDICAL quality control ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PRIVATE sector - Abstract
Background: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) government aspires to build a world class health system to improve the quality of healthcare and the health outcomes for its population. To achieve this it has implemented extensive health system reforms in the past 10 years. The nature, extent and success of these reforms has not recently been comprehensively reviewed. In this paper we review the progress and outcomes of health systems reform in the UAE.Methods: We searched relevant databases and other sources to identify published and unpublished studies and other data available between 01 January 2002 and 31 March 2016. Eligible studies were appraised and data were descriptively and narratively synthesized.Results: Seventeen studies were included covering the following themes: the UAE health system, population health, the burden of disease, healthcare financing, healthcare workforce and the impact of reforms. Few, if any, studies prospectively set out to define and measure outcomes. A central part of the reforms has been the introduction of mandatory private health insurance, the development of the private sector and the separation of planning and regulatory responsibilities from provider functions. The review confirmed the commitment of the UAE to build a world class health system but amongst researchers and commentators opinion is divided on whether the reforms have been successful although patient satisfaction with services appears high and there are some positive indications including increasing coverage of hospital accreditation. The UAE has a rapidly growing population with a unique age and sex distribution, there have been notable successes in improving child and maternal mortality and extending life expectancy but there are high levels of chronic diseases. The relevance of the reforms for public health and their impact on the determinants of chronic diseases have been questioned.Conclusions: From the existing research literature it is not possible to conclude whether UAE health system reforms are working. We recommend that research should continue in this area but that research questions should be more clearly defined, focusing whenever possible on outcomes rather than processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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22. Architectural frameworks: defining the structures for implementing learning health systems.
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Lessard, Lysanne, Michalowski, Wojtek, Fung-Kee-Fung, Michael, Jones, Lori, and Grudniewicz, Agnes
- Subjects
- *
ARCHITECTURAL design , *ARCHITECTURAL sections , *HEALTH care reform , *HEALTH policy , *MEDICAL care , *DECISION making , *HEALTH planning , *LEARNING - Abstract
Background: The vision of transforming health systems into learning health systems (LHSs) that rapidly and continuously transform knowledge into improved health outcomes at lower cost is generating increased interest in government agencies, health organizations, and health research communities. While existing initiatives demonstrate that different approaches can succeed in making the LHS vision a reality, they are too varied in their goals, focus, and scale to be reproduced without undue effort. Indeed, the structures necessary to effectively design and implement LHSs on a larger scale are lacking. In this paper, we propose the use of architectural frameworks to develop LHSs that adhere to a recognized vision while being adapted to their specific organizational context. Architectural frameworks are high-level descriptions of an organization as a system; they capture the structure of its main components at varied levels, the interrelationships among these components, and the principles that guide their evolution. Because these frameworks support the analysis of LHSs and allow their outcomes to be simulated, they act as pre-implementation decision-support tools that identify potential barriers and enablers of system development. They thus increase the chances of successful LHS deployment.Discussion: We present an architectural framework for LHSs that incorporates five dimensions-goals, scientific, social, technical, and ethical-commonly found in the LHS literature. The proposed architectural framework is comprised of six decision layers that model these dimensions. The performance layer models goals, the scientific layer models the scientific dimension, the organizational layer models the social dimension, the data layer and information technology layer model the technical dimension, and the ethics and security layer models the ethical dimension. We describe the types of decisions that must be made within each layer and identify methods to support decision-making.Conclusion: In this paper, we outline a high-level architectural framework grounded in conceptual and empirical LHS literature. Applying this architectural framework can guide the development and implementation of new LHSs and the evolution of existing ones, as it allows for clear and critical understanding of the types of decisions that underlie LHS operations. Further research is required to assess and refine its generalizability and methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The Health Care Reform in Mexico: Before and After the 1985 Earthquakes.
- Author
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Soberón, Guillermo, Frenk, Julio, and Sepúlveda, Jaime
- Subjects
EARTHQUAKES ,EARTH movements ,NATURAL disasters ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
The earthquakes that hit Mexico City in September 1985 caused considerable damage both to the population and to important medical facilities. The disaster took place while the country was undertaking a profound reform of its health care system. This reform had introduced a new principle for allocating and distributing the benefits of health care, namely, the principle of citizenship. Operationally, the reform includes an effort to decentralize the decision-making authority, to modernize the administration, to achieve greater coordination within the health sector and among sectors, and to extend coverage to the entire population through an ambitious primary care program. This paper examines the health context in which the reform was taking place when the September earthquakes hit. After presenting the damages caused by the quakes, the paper analyzes the characteristics of the immediate response by the health system. Since many facilities within the system were severely damaged, a series of options for reconstruction are posited. The main lesson to be learned from the Mexican case is that cuts in health care programs are not the inevitable response to economic or natural crises. On the contrary, it is precisely when the majority of the population is undergoing difficulties that a universal and equitable health system becomes most necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
24. Does a new case-based payment system promote the construction of the ordered health delivery system? Evidence from a pilot city in China.
- Author
-
Shi, Huanyu, Cheng, Zhichao, Liu, Zhichao, Zhang, Yang, and Zhang, Peng
- Subjects
MEDICAL care use ,POLICY sciences ,PROSPECTIVE payment systems ,INSURANCE ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,HOSPITALS ,TIME series analysis ,TERTIARY care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH care reform ,GOVERNMENT programs ,LABOR incentives ,HEALTH promotion ,CASE studies ,PAY for performance ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Background: The construction of the ordered health delivery system in China aims to enhance equity and optimize the efficient use of medical resources by rationally allocating patients to different levels of medical institutions based on the severity of their condition. However, superior hospitals have been overcrowded, and primary healthcare facilities have been underutilized in recent years. China has developed a new case-based payment method called "Diagnostic Intervention Package" (DIP). The government is trying to use this economic lever to encourage medical institutions to actively assume treatment tasks consistent with their functional positioning and service capabilities. Methods: This study takes Tai'an, a DIP pilot city, as a case study and uses an interrupted time series analysis to analyze the impact of DIP reform on the case severity and service scope of medical institutions at different levels. Results: The results show that after the DIP reform, the proportion of patients receiving complicated procedures (tertiary hospitals: β
3 = 0.197, P < 0.001; secondary hospitals: β3 = 0.132, P = 0.020) and the case mix index (tertiary hospitals: β3 = 0.022, P < 0.001; secondary hospitals: β3 = 0.008, P < 0.001) in tertiary and secondary hospitals increased, and the proportion of primary-DIP-groups cases decreased (tertiary hospitals: β3 = -0.290, P < 0.001; secondary hospitals: β3 = -1.200, P < 0.001), aligning with the anticipated policy objectives. However, the proportion of patients receiving complicated procedures (β3 = 0.186, P = 0.002) and the case mix index (β3 = 0.002, P < 0.001) in primary healthcare facilities increased after the reform, while the proportion of primary-DIP-groups cases (β3 = -0.515, P = 0.005) and primary-DIP-groups coverage (β3 = -2.011, P < 0.001) decreased, which will reduce the utilization efficiency of medical resources and increase inequity. Conclusion: The DIP reform did not effectively promote the construction of the ordered health delivery system. Policymakers need to adjust economic incentives and implement restraint mechanisms to regulate the behavior of medical institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Policy Evaluation of the Reform of Ambulatory Patient Groups Based on Access, Quality, and Cost of the Iron Triangle Value Chain in China.
- Author
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Li, Lele, Tian, Mengyi, and Gu, Debin
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL quality control ,RESEARCH ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL care costs ,MEDICAL care ,REGRESSION analysis ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,NATIONAL health services ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,HEALTH insurance ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PUBLIC hospitals ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,FINANCIAL management ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DATA analysis software ,INSURANCE ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Objective. As part of the efforts to build a practical, effective, and diversified medical insurance payment method, it is crucial for China to deepen the reform of ambulatory patient groups (APGs). This study was aimed to explore the mechanism and effect of this policy from three dimensions, including medical expenses, medical insurance funds, and medical services. Methods. In 2020, China's pilot reform of APG was initiated in Jinhua City, Zhejiang Province. Descriptive statistics, correlation analysis, and OLS regression analysis were utilized to evaluate the effect of the APG reform in Jinhua. Results. The implementation of the reform can contribute significantly to establishing a comprehensive medical service governance mechanism of classified settlement and coordinated promotion. It also plays a critical role in safeguarding people's lives and health by promoting the high-level development of medical insurance systems and public hospitals, optimizing the quality of medical services, and improving the efficiency of medical insurance funds. Conclusion. Through the lens of policy evaluation, our findings can provide useful experience for the implementation of the outpatient medical insurance payment method in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Fail to prepare and you can prepare to fail: the experience of financing path changes in teaching hospitals in Iran.
- Author
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Doshmangir, Leila, Rashidian, Arash, Jafari, Mehdi, Ravaghi, Hamid, and Takian, Amirhossein
- Subjects
TEACHING hospitals ,HEALTH care reform ,PURCHASE orders ,USER charges ,MEDICAL care ,ECONOMIC impact of health care reform ,MEDICAL economics ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,PUBLIC hospitals ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HOSPITAL purchasing ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEALTH policy ,RESEARCH ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,EVALUATION research ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,FEE for service (Medical fees) ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: In 1995, teaching and public hospitals that are affiliated with the ministry of health and medical education (MOHME) in Iran were granted financial self-sufficiency to practice contract-based relations with insurance organizations. The so-called "hospital autonomy" policy involved giving authority to the insurance organizations to purchase health services. The policy aimed at improving hospitals' performance, hoping to reduce government's costs. However, the policy was never implemented as intended. This was because most participating hospitals gave up to implement autonomous financing and took other financing pathways. This paper analyses the reasons for the gap between the intended policy and its execution. The lessons learned from this analysis can inform, we envisage, the implementation of similar initiatives in other settings.Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with 28 national and 13 regional health policy experts. We also gathered a comprehensive and purposeful set of related documents and analyzed their content. The qualitative data were analyzed by thematic inductive-deductive approach.Results: We found a number of prerequisites and requirements that were not prepared prior to the implementing hospital autonomy policy and categorized them into policy content (sources of funds for the policy), implementation context (organization of insurance organizations, medical tariffs, hospitals' organization, feasibility of policy implementation, actors and stakeholders' support), and implementation approach (implementation method, blanket approach to the implementation and timing of implementation). These characteristics resulted in unsuitable platform for policy implementation and eventually led to policy failure.Conclusions: Autonomy of teaching hospitals and their exclusive financing through insurance organizations did not achieve the desired goals of purchaser-provider split in Iran. Unless contextual preparations are in place, hospital autonomy will not succeed and problematic financial relations between service providers and patients in autonomous hospitals may not be ceased as a result. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
27. Atencion primaria de la salud. Continuidades neoliberales en la asistencia centrada en la persona.
- Author
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Gottero, Laura
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENTS ,PRIMARY health care ,HISTORY - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Ciencias de la Salud is the property of Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Senora del Rosario and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2012
28. Lessons from two decades of health reform in Central Asia.
- Author
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Rechel, B, Ahmedov, M, Akkazieva, B, Katsaga, A, Khodjamurodov, G, and McKee, M
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL personnel - Abstract
Since becoming independent at the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991, the countries of Central Asia have made profound changes to their health systems, affecting organization and governance, financing and delivery of care. The changes took place in a context of adversity, with major political transition, economic recession, and, in the case of Tajikistan, civil war, and with varying degrees of success. In this paper we review these experiences in this rarely studied part of the world to identify what has worked. This includes effective governance, the co-ordination of donor activities, linkage of health care restructuring to new economic instruments, and the importance of pilot projects as precursors to national implementation, as well as gathering support among both health workers and the public. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Promotion du « choix » ou gestion du risque ? Retour sur l'introduction inachevée du « choix » pour les usagers des services de santé mentale en Angleterre sous le New Labour.
- Author
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COURTIN, ÉMILIE
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,BRITISH politics & government, 1945- ,MENTAL health services ,HEALTH care reform ,CHOICE (Psychology) ,HEALTH policy ,MENTAL health policy - Abstract
Copyright of Lien Social et Politiques is the property of Institut National de Recherche Scientifique (INRS) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. What can global health institutions do to help strengthen health systems in low income countries?
- Author
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Balabanova, Dina, McKee, Martin, Mills, Anne, Walt, Gill, and Haines, Andy
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Weaknesses in health systems contribute to a failure to improve health outcomes in developing countries, despite increased official development assistance. Changes in the demands on health systems, as well as their scope to respond, mean that the situation is likely to become more problematic in the future. Diverse global initiatives seek to strengthen health systems, but progress will require better coordination between them, use of strategies based on the best available evidence obtained especially from evaluation of large scale programs, and improved global aid architecture that supports these processes. This paper sets out the case for global leadership to support health systems investments and help ensure the synergies between vertical and horizontal programs that are essential for effective functioning of health systems. At national level, it is essential to increase capacity to manage and deliver services, situate interventions firmly within national strategies, ensure effective implementation, and co-ordinate external support with local resources. Health systems performance should be monitored, with clear lines of accountability, and reforms should build on evidence of what works in what circumstances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Risk adjustment policy options for casemix funding: international lessons in financing reform.
- Author
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Antioch, Kathryn M., Ellis, Randall P., Gillett, Steve, Borovnicar, Daniel, and Marshall, Ric P.
- Subjects
HOSPITALS ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH policy ,DIAGNOSIS ,FINANCE ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,DIAGNOSIS related groups ,DIAGNOSIS related group statistics ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,HEALTH care reform ,HOSPITAL costs ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENTS ,RISK assessment ,PROSPECTIVE payment systems ,PILOT projects ,SEVERITY of illness index ,STATISTICAL models ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper explores modified hospital casemix payment formulae that would refine the diagnosis-related group (DRG) system in Victoria, Australia, which already makes adjustments for teaching, severity and demographics. We estimate alternative casemix funding methods using multiple regressions for individual hospital episodes from 2001 to 2003 on 70 high-deficit DRGs, focussing on teaching hospitals where the largest deficits have occurred. Our casemix variables are diagnosis- and procedure-based severity markers, counts of diagnoses and procedures, disease types, complexity, day outliers, emergency admission and "transfers in." The results are presented for four policy options that vary according to whether all of the dollars or only some are reallocated, whether all or some hospitals are used and whether the alternatives augment or replace existing payments. While our approach identifies variables that help explain patient cost variations, hospital-level simulations suggest that the approaches explored would only reduce teaching hospital underpayment by about 10%. The implications of various policy options are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Knowledge mapping as a technique to support knowledge translation.
- Author
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Ebener, S, Khan, A, Shademani, R, Compernolle, L, Beltran, M, Lansang, MA, and Lippmana, M
- Subjects
- *
KNOWLEDGE management , *PUBLIC health , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH policy , *MEDICINE , *WORLD health , *HEALTH care reform , *HEALTH - Abstract
This paper explores the possibility of integrating knowledge mapping into a conceptual framework that could serve as a tool for understanding the many complex processes, resources and people involved in a health system, and for identifying potential gaps within knowledge translation processes in order to address them. After defining knowledge mapping, this paper presents various examples of the application of this process in health, before looking at the steps that need to be taken to identify potential gaps, to determine to what extent these gaps affect the knowledge translation process and to establish their cause. This is followed by proposals for interventions aimed at strengthening the overall process. Finally, potential limitations on the application of this framework at the country level are addressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Public Policy in the Passive-Aggressive State: Health Care Reform in Bosnia-Hercegovina 1995–2001.
- Author
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Deets, Stephen
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC administration - Abstract
This article uses Bosnia and Hercegovina as a prototype of an emerging subset of weak states, the passive-aggressive state. Appearing as the result of agreements ending civil strife, the general characteristics of the passive-aggressive state include complex power-sharing arrangements at the centre and local institutions that are designed for capture by parties to the conflict, which in turn creates a weak and segmented civil society. As a result, only the international community can devise and financially support policy reform, but it must rely on the state to implement the reform. Dependent on international support for its own survival, the centre rhetorically embraces reform while local institutions engage in passive resistance to block it. This article uses three examples of health care reform in Bosnia to illustrate the difficulties of reform in these types of states. The paper concludes with observations on how strengthening the powers of the central government and reorienting international aid towards civil society might alleviate some of the structural problems of passive-aggressive states. passive-aggressive : Of, relating to, or having a personality disorder characterised by habitual passive resistance to demands for adequate performance in occupational or social situations, as by procrastination, stubbornness, sullenness, and inefficiency ( American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language , 4th Edition). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. (Re)form with Substance? Restructuring and governance in the Australian health system 2004/05.
- Author
-
Rix, Mark, Owen, Alan, and Eagar, Kathy
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,CRISIS management ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The Australian health system has been the subject of multiple reviews and reorganisations over the last twenty years or more. The year 2004-2005 was no different. This paper reviews the reforms, (re)structures and governance arrangements in place at both the national and state/territory levels in the last year. At the national level some progress has been made in 2004/05 through the Australian Health Ministers' Council and there is now a national health reform agenda, albeit not a comprehensive one, endorsed by the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) in June 2005. Quality and safety was an increasing focus in 2004-2005 at both the national and jurisdictional levels, as was the need for workforce reform. Although renewed policy attention was given to the need to better integrate and coordinate health care, there is little evidence of any real progress this last year. More progress was made on a national approach to workforce reform. At the jurisdictional level, the usual rounds of reviews and restructuring occurred in several jurisdictions and, in 2005, they are organisationally very different from each other. The structure and effectiveness of jurisdictional health authorities are now more important. All health authorities are being expected to drive an ambitious set of national and local reforms. At the same time, most have now blurred the boundary between policy and service delivery and are devoting significant resources to centrally 'crisis managing' their service systems. These same reasons led to decentralisation in previous restructuring cycles. While there were many changes in 2004-2005, and a new national report to COAG on health reform is expected at the end of 2005, based on current evidence there is little room for optimism about the prospects for real progress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Business and Health Care Policy Reform in the 1980s: The 50 States.
- Author
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Mintz, Beth and Palmer, Donald
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care costs ,BUSINESS enterprises ,BUSINESS partnerships - Abstract
This paper explores the causes and consequences of business involvement in health care reform. It uses the 50 U.S. states as its focus, analyzing a series of legislative initiatives popular in the 1980s. From an empirical standpoint, it builds on earlier work on business involvement in health care issues; from a theoretical standpoint, it aims to improve our understanding of business involvement in the policy-making process. It considers three theories of the state which, consistent with recent work in this area, seem to provide complementary explanations of the policy-making process. It finds that business' parochial economic interest stimulated business participation in overall health care reform activity while business' general economic interest affected health care coalition formation more specifically. Business involvement was most vibrant in states where large corporations were headquartered and, in the case of overall health care reform activity at least, this was augmented by the presence of major commercial bank headquarters. The presence of large health care companies inhibited overall business reform activity while stimulating formal coalition development. In turn, coalition development, but not more general reform activity, influenced health care reform legislation in the case of one of the three policies under investigation. For the other two types of legislation, business interests, state interests, and state capacities, all contributed to progress toward passage. These findings confirm the wisdom of the recent emphasis on exploring various theories of the state as complementary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. LGBTQ Population Health Policy Advocacy.
- Author
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Moran, Christina Iannucci
- Subjects
HEALTH of LGBTQ+ people ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH education ,CORPORATE culture ,HEALTH care reform - Abstract
Introduction: Members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, and queer/questioning (LGBTQ) community have specific health-care needs that are often overlooked by health-care providers due to education gaps and discrimination. Health-care inequality for this population has been researched and found to negatively contribute to poorer health outcomes for LGBTQ individuals. Background: There exists a critical need for LGBTQ health education at the undergraduate level for future health-care providers. Additionally, policy reform that establishes an LGBTQ-inclusive code of conduct and educates health-care workers on LGBTQ-specific health needs aims to reshape organizational culture. Recommendations: Curriculum-based education on LGBTQ health for students in health-care professions opens up conversations about the unique needs of this population and paves the way for improved provision of care and better relationships between providers and patients. Education and inclusive policy reform within organizations are critical for improving health outcomes for LGBTQ individuals. Conclusion: Increasing health-care providers' knowledge of this population's specific health needs and learning how to deliver culturally appropriate and sensitive care will lead to improved health outcomes for members of the LGBTQ community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Relationship-centered health care as a Lean intervention.
- Author
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DUNSFORD, JENNIFER and REIMER, LAURA E.
- Subjects
LEAN management ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,SOCIAL interaction ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care standards ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,PATIENTS ,QUALITY assurance - Abstract
Continuous improvement efforts, recognized in much literature as Lean management techniques have been used in efforts to improve efficiency in democratic health care contexts for some time to varying degrees of success. The complexity of the health care system is magnified by the sheer number of processes and sub processes required to deliver value within a bureaucratic environment, while maintaining some level of compassionate and personalized care. There is inherent tension between what is required to be efficient and what is required to be caring and this conflict presses against Lean practice at the level of delivery.Administration and care intersect at the point of the patient's experience. In order to achieve the dual goals of improved value and lower costs, the application of Lean thinking for meaningful health care reform must acknowledge the fundamental dichotomy between the impersonal tasks required to provide health services, and human interactions. Meaningful health care reform requires an acknowledgement of this distinction, currently not recognized in literature. While administrative process improvements are necessary, they are insufficient to achieve a sustainable and caring health care system. Lean thinking must be applied differently for administrative processes and patient care encounters, because these are fundamentally different processes. In this way, Lean principles will effectively contribute to sustainable health system improvements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Through the Lenses of Organizational Sociology: The Role of Organizational Theory and Research in Conceptualizing and Examining Our Health Care System.
- Author
-
Flood, Ann Barry and Fennel, Mary L.
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL change ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,ORGANIZATION ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
This paper reviews various theoretical perspectives on organizational change which have been and could be applied to medical organizations. These perspectives are discussed as both filters influencing our observations (research) and mirrors of the shifting dynamics of delivery system reform (policy). We conclude with an examination of how such theories can provide useful insights into our rapidly changing health care system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
39. Integrated care policies in Lombardy: lessons learnt and next challenges.
- Author
-
Colombo, Alessandro, Ferrara, Lucia, and Morando, Verdiana
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH care reform - Abstract
The Regional Council of Lombardy Region (legislative body) launched an enquiry to understand the integrated care (IC) challenges and their strategic role in light of the forthcoming regional health service reform. The contribution therefore represents the policy paper which takes the offering of such an inquiry on examines the Lombard case study of IC. The paper synthetises the IC policies and services' delivered in Lombardy hitherto and discussed the lessons learnt on three assets. Firstly, IC policies and interventions in force in Lombardy are presented and analysed in depth, to value their scopes, targets, volume, costs and the legislative scenario over IC, which states the role of departments (health and social), the financing systems and the legal regulation compared to the national one. Secondly, to evaluate the outcomes of IC, domiciliary care is analysed in depth and compared with three other Italian Regions, conceived among the best performers nationally. The comparison holds a key role to understand the results achieved in Lombardy against other solutions applied in similar contexts. Finally, the third part exploits the previous towards: on the one hand, evaluate the impacts of different policies, managerial strategies and institutional assets can have over the services' delivery system, as for the case of domiciliary care. On the other, the lesson learnt are synthesised in light of the first part to clearly stated recommendations of short, medium and long term objectives for the Regional Council if IC has to be developed and prioritised in the forthcoming reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
40. Residents' satisfaction with primary medical and health services in Western China.
- Author
-
Weinan Dong, Qingyu Zhang, Chunsheng Yan, Wanling Fu, Linlin Xu, Dong, Weinan, Zhang, Qingyu, Yan, Chunsheng, Fu, Wanling, and Xu, Linlin
- Subjects
PRIMARY care ,MEDICAL care ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,COGNITION ,HYPERTENSION ,INTERVIEWING ,PATIENT satisfaction ,PHYSICIANS ,PRIMARY health care ,RURAL population ,QUALITATIVE research ,DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
Background: Currently, China is in the process of medical and health care reform, and the establishment of primary medical and health services covering urban and rural residents is an important aspect of this process. Studying the satisfaction of residents of underdeveloped areas with their primary medical and health services and identifying the factors that can increase the satisfaction of different groups may improve patient compliance and ultimately improve health. Moreover, such research may provide a reference for the development of medical and health undertakings in similarly underdeveloped areas.Methods: A face-to-face survey was conducted on a stratified random sample of 2200 residents in Gansu by using structured questionnaires. Demographic characteristics were collated, and questionnaires were factor-analysed and weighted using SPSS software to obtain scores for each factor, as well as total satisfaction scores. The characteristics of poorly satisfied populations were determined by a multiple linear regression analysis using SAS software. A cluster analysis was performed using SAS software for classification and a separate discussion of populations.Results: The hypertension self-awareness rate (11.29%) of the sampled population was lower than the average hypertension prevalence (23.85%), as recorded in the 2014 Health Statistical Yearbook of the region. The disease knowledge awareness factor was the lowest factor (2.857), whereas the policy awareness factor was the highest factor (4.772). The overall satisfaction was moderate (3.898). The multivariate linear regression model was significant (p <0.05). The regression coefficients were -0.041 for minors; 0.065 for unemployed people; and 0.094 for people with an elementary school educational level, a value lower than that of other population groups. A cluster analysis was used to divide the respondents into five groups. The overall satisfaction was lowest in the second population group (rural, middle-aged)(Fz = 3.64) and was highest in the fourth population group(minors) (Fz = 4.13). Different population groups showed different satisfaction rates in F1 to F6.Conclusion: Hypertensive patients had low self-awareness, and residents had a poor grasp of disease and limited health knowledge. Their overall satisfaction was moderate. Residents expressed comparatively high satisfaction with the current policy. Minors, adults with low level of education, unemployed people and other vulnerable groups expressed low overall satisfaction. The degree of satisfaction varied greatly among the different groups. Targeted medical and health practices should be implemented for different groups; additionally, the public health practice should be strengthened. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Opportunities and Threats of the Legally Facilitated Performance-Based Managed Entry Agreements in Slovakia: The Early-Adoption Perspective.
- Author
-
Hospodková, Petra, Gilíková, Klára, Barták, Miroslav, Marušáková, Elena, and Tichopád, Aleš
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL laws & legislation ,ORPHAN drug laws ,HEALTH policy ,RESEARCH methodology ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,CONSUMER attitudes ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH care reform ,HUMAN services programs ,QUALITATIVE research ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,QUALITY assurance ,LABOR incentives ,HEALTH attitudes ,RESEARCH funding ,TECHNOLOGY ,RISK management in business ,JUDGMENT sampling ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PAY for performance - Abstract
Slovakia has adopted an amendment to Act No. 363/2011, regulating, among other things, drug reimbursement and is undergoing a significant change in the availability of innovative treatments for patients. High expectations are associated with arrangements related to performance-based managed entry agreements. Opinions and positions towards this change appear to be inconsistent, and for the further application of the law in practice and when setting up the main implementation processes, it is necessary to understand the positions and opinions of the individual actors who are involved in the PB-MEA process. The interviews were conducted in the period from 20 May to 15 August 2022 around the same time as the finalisation of the amendment to Act No. 363/2011 and its adoption. A roughly one-hour open interview was conducted on a sample of 12 stakeholders in the following groups: representatives of the Ministry of Health, health-care providers, pharmaceutical companies and others, including a health insurance company. The main objective was to qualitatively describe the perception of this topic by key stakeholders in Slovakia. The responses were analysed using MAXQDATA 2022 software to obtain codes associated with key expressions. We identified three main strong top categories of expressions that strongly dominated the pro-management interviews with stakeholders: legislation, opportunities and threats. Ambiguity and insufficient coverage of the new law, improved availability of medicinal products and threats associated with data, IT systems and potentially unfavourable new reimbursement schemes were identified as key topics of each of the said top categories, respectively. Among individual sets of respondents, there is frequent consensus on both opportunities and threats in the area of implementing process changes in PB-MEA. For the successful implementation of the law in practice, some basic threats need to be removed, among which in particular is insufficient data infrastructure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Next Generation of Payment Reforms for Population Health – An Actionable Agenda for 2035 Informed by Past Gains and Ongoing Lessons.
- Author
-
KADAKIA, KUSHAL T. and OFFODILE, ANAEZE C.
- Subjects
FEE for service (Medical fees) ,HEALTH policy ,RURAL hospitals ,STRATEGIC planning ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,MANAGED care programs ,HOME care services ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,BENCHMARKING (Management) ,CRITICAL care medicine ,HEALTH insurance ,PROSPECTIVE payment systems ,FINANCIAL management ,POPULATION health ,BUDGET ,HEALTH care rationing ,FEDERAL government ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals - Abstract
Policy PointsThe predominantly fee‐for‐service reimbursement architecture of the US health care system contributes to waste and excess spending.While the past decade of payment reforms has galvanized the adoption of alternative payment models and generated moderate savings, uptake of truly population‐based payment systems continues to lag, and interventions to date have had limited impact on care quality, outcomes, and health equity.To realize the promise of payment reforms as instruments for delivery system transformation, future policies for health care financing must focus on accelerating the diffusion of value‐based payment, leveraging payments to redress inequities, and incentivizing partnerships with cross‐sector entities to invest in the upstream drivers of health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Identifying key policy objectives for strong primary care: a cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Burgmann, Sarah, Paier-Abuzahra, Muna, Sprenger, Martin, Avian, Alexander, and Siebenhofer, Andrea
- Subjects
WORK ,CROSS-sectional method ,FAMILY medicine ,VOCATIONAL education ,MEDICAL students ,MEDICAL care ,FISHER exact test ,PRIMARY health care ,HEALTH care reform ,SURVEYS ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,QUALITATIVE research ,INTERNSHIP programs ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,DECISION making ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,WAGES ,MANAGEMENT ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Aim: The aim of this study was to identify key policy objectives by investigating the perception of important stakeholders and affected professionals concerning relevance and feasibility of a successful primary care (PC) reform. Background: Since 2013, the Austrian PC system has been undergoing a reform process to establish multiprofessional primary care units. The reforms have various defined objectives and lack clear priorities. Methods: After the definition and consensus-based selection of 12 policy objectives, a cross-sectional online survey on their relevance and feasibility was distributed via email and social media to PC and public health networks. The survey was conducted in the period from January to February 2020. Results were analyzed descriptively, and further, Pearson Chi-Square Test or Fisher's Exact Test was performed for group comparison regarding respondents' characteristics. Open-ended responses were analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Findings: In total, 169 questionnaires were completed. A total of 46.3% of the responders had more than 20 years of professional experience (female: 60.5%). A mandatory internship in general practice, vocational training for general practice, and a modern remuneration system were the three top-rated policy objectives regarding relevance. A mandatory internship in general practice, specialization in general practice, and coding of services and diagnosis were assessed as the most feasible objectives. The group comparisons regarding working field, years of professional experience, age, and sex did not show any meaningful results in the evaluation of relevance and feasibility. Discussion: In the view of the study participants, easily obtainable objectives include adapting the duration and setting of internships for medical students, as well as mandatory vocational training for GP trainees. Further efforts are necessary to achieve complex objectives such as the adoption of a modern remuneration scheme and a comprehensive quality assurance program. Building capacity and creating team-oriented environments are also important aspects of a successful PC reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Implementation of mental health policies and reform in post-conflict countries: the case of post-genocide Rwanda.
- Author
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Sabey, Courtney S
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,GENOCIDE ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH care reform - Abstract
The global burden of mental illness is rising, with populations in post-conflict countries contributing significantly to the numbers. Governments in these countries face the dual challenge of responding to increased mental health needs and implementing this response with institutions and economies weakened by war. This research studies the process, successes and challenges of implementing mental health reform in a low-resource, post-conflict country, a subject that is rarely studied. Based on fieldwork conducted in Rwanda in 2019, the study focuses on the implementation of this African country's post-genocide mental health policy, which relies primarily on strategies of decentralization and integration into the primary health care system. The results are based on 30 interviews conducted in Kigali and Ngoma with primary stakeholders including government officials, representatives from nongovernmental organizations, service providers and academics. These stakeholders held a positive view of the main strategies of the policy as they resulted in increased accessibility and availability of care for Rwandans. However, they also noted the institutionalization and individualization of mental health care as gaps in the implementation that do not respond to the Rwandan context. Building on complexity theory, the analysis found that many of these gaps, as well as opportunities to address them, are missed by the government due to top-down implementation and a lack of collaboration with local organizations and service providers working in the domain. The research results suggest that although it is possible to prioritize mental health in low-resource, complex settings, the implementation of such reform requires collaborative, adaptive and horizontal approaches in order to adequately address and respond to citizen needs and ensure quality mental health care for all. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Inside the black box: modelling health care financing reform in data-poor contexts.
- Author
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McIntyre, Di and Borghi, Jo
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH care industry - Abstract
Modelling the likely financial resource requirements and potential sources of revenue for health system reform options is of great potential value to policy-makers. Models provide an indication of the financial feasibility and sustainability of such reforms and highlight the implications of alternative reform paths. There has been increasing use of financial models of health sector reform in recent years, particularly since the development of user-friendly software such as SimIns, which was developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ). This paper outlines the process of developing country-specific spreadsheet-based models to explore the financial resource requirements of health system reform options in South Africa and Tanzania. Building one's own model, although time consuming, allows for greater flexibility and forces the analysts to give careful consideration to the assumptions underlying the model. The core variables in our models are: population, health service utilization rates and unit costs. The paper outlines the types of disaggregation of these variables, the range of possible data sources, key challenges with securing accurate data for each variable, and relevant evidence on which to base key assumptions, and how we went about addressing these challenges. We also briefly review how to model the revenue-generating potential of alternative sources of health care financing. The intention of the paper is to provide guidance for analysts who wish to develop their own models, and to illustrate, with reference to the South African and Tanzanian modelling experience, how one has to adapt to data constraints and context-specific modelling requirements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Using stakeholder analysis to support moves towards universal coverage: lessons from the SHIELD project.
- Author
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Gilson, Lucy, Erasmus, Ermin, Borghi, Jo, Macha, Janet, Kamuzora, Peter, and Mtei, Gemini
- Subjects
STAKEHOLDERS ,HEALTH insurance ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Stakeholder analysis is widely recommended as a tool for gathering insights on policy actor interests in, positions on, and power to influence, health policy issues. Such information is recognized to be critical in developing viable health policy proposals, and is particularly important for new health care financing proposals that aim to secure universal coverage (UC).However, there remain surprisingly few published accounts of the use of stakeholder analysis in health policy development generally, and health financing specifically, and even fewer that draw lessons from experience about how to do and how to use such analysis. This paper, therefore, aims to support those developing or researching UC reforms to think both about how to conduct stakeholder analysis, and how to use it to support evidence-informed pro-poor health policy development. It presents practical lessons and ideas drawn from experience of doing stakeholder analysis around UC reforms in South Africa and Tanzania, combined with insights from other relevant material. The paper has two parts. The first presents lessons of experience for conducting a stakeholder analysis, and the second, ideas about how to use the analysis to support policy design and the development of actor and broader political management strategies.Comparison of experience across South Africa and Tanzania shows that there are some commonalities concerning which stakeholders have general interests in UC reform. However, differences in context and in reform proposals generate differences in the particular interests of stakeholders and their likely positioning on reform proposals, as well as in their relative balance of power. It is, therefore, difficult to draw cross-national policy comparisons around these specific issues. Nonetheless, the paper shows that cross-national policy learning is possible around the approach to analysis, the factors influencing judgements and the implications for, and possible approaches to, management of policy processes. Such learning does not entail generalization about which UC reform package offers most gain in any setting, but rather about how to manage the reform process within a particular context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Health care utilization in Ecuador: a multilevel analysis of socio-economic determinants and inequality issues.
- Author
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López-Cevallos, Daniel F. and Chunhuei Chi
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH facilities ,HEALTH policy ,HOSPITAL care ,HEALTH insurance ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,HEALTH service areas - Abstract
This article examines socio-economic determinants and inequality of health care utilization in Ecuador. Despite health reform efforts in Latin America, drastic socio-economic inequalities persist across the region, including Ecuador. Almost a third of Ecuador's population lack regular access to health services, while more than two-thirds have no health insurance and insufficient resources to pay for health care services. Using Andersen's model of health care utilization behaviour, relevant variables were selected from the 2004 National Demographic and Maternal & Child Health Survey (ENDEMAIN) household survey. Four outcomes were assessed: use of preventive services, number of curative visits, hospitalization, and use of antiparasitic medicines. Adjusting for various predisposing, enabling and need factors, a significant negative relationship was found between household economic status (as measured by assets and consumption quintiles) and utilization of preventive and curative services. The same was true for use of antiparasitic medicines. Further, indigenous ethnicity was found to be a significant negative predictor of health care utilization, regardless of economic status. These socio-economic inequalities in the use of health care services suggest the need for health care reform in Ecuador to address these issues more systematically. It is necessary for public health authorities to move forward on a reform that will expand coverage, particularly to indigenous and low- and middle-income households [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Disentangling the Effects of Health Reform in Massachusetts: How Important Are the Special Provisions for Young Adults?
- Author
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Long, Sharon K, Yemane, Alshadye, and Stockley, Karen
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HEALTH of young adults ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
In this article the authors discuss the health insurance coverage required in the state of Massachusetts, focusing on the special provisions for young adults. To gauge the cumulative impact of health care reform for young adults, the authors examine insurance coverage before and after the implementation of universal state health care and compare it to a state without health coverage. The authors found that special provision targeting young adults played a significant role in the development of insurance coverage for that group.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Knowledge-based changes to health systems: the Thai experience in policy development.
- Author
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Tangcharoensathien, Viroj, Wibulpholprasert, Suwit, and Nitayaramphong, Sanguan
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH planning , *HEALTH care reform , *HEALTH policy , *HEALTH services administration , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
Over the past two decades the government in Thailand has adopted an incremental approach to extending health-care coverage to the population. It first offered coverage to government employees and their dependants, and then introduced a scheme under which low-income people were exempt from charges for health care. This scheme was later extended to include elderly people, children younger than 12 years of age and disabled people. A voluntary public insurance scheme was implemented to cover those who could afford to pay for their own care. Private sector employees were covered by the Social Health Insurance scheme, which was implemented in 1991. Despite these efforts, 30% of the population remained uninsured in 2001. In October of that year, the new government decided to embark on a programme to provide universal health-care coverage. This paper describes how research into health systems and health policy contributed to the move towards universal coverage. Data on health systems financing and functioning had been gathered before and after the founding of the Health Systems Research Institute in early 1990. In 1991, a contract capitation model had been used to launch the Social Health Insurance scheme. The advantages of using a capitation model are that it contains costs and provides an acceptable quality of service as opposed to the cost escalation and inefficiency that occur under fee-for-service reimbursement models, such as the one used to provide medical benefits to civil servants. An analysis of the implementation of universal coverage found that politics moved universal coverage onto the policy agenda during the general election campaign in January 2001. The capacity for research on health systems and policy to generate evidence guided the development of the policy and the design of the system at a later stage. Because the reformists who sought to bring about universal coverage (who were mostly civil servants in the Ministry of Public Health and members of nongovernmental organizations) were able to bridge the gap between researchers and politicians, an evidence-based political decision was made. Additionally, the media played a part in shaping the societal consensus on universal coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
50. Economic Organization of Medicine and the Committee on the Costs of Medical Care.
- Author
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Perkins, Barbara Bridgman
- Subjects
MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICINE - Abstract
Recent strategies in managed care and managed competition illustrate how health care reforms may reproduce the patterns of economic organization of their times. Such a reform approach is not a new development in the United States. The work of the 1927-1932 Committee on the Costs of medical Care examplifies an earlier effort that applied forms of economic organization to medical care. The committee tried to restructure medicine along lines consistent with its economic environment while attributing its models variously to science, profession, and business. Like current approaches, the committee's reports defined costs as the major problem and business models of organization as the major solution. The reports recommended expanded financial management and group medicine, which would include growth in self-supporting middle-class services such as fee clinics and middle-rate hospital units. Identifying these elements as corporate practice of medicine, the American Medical Association-based minority dissented from the final report in favor of conserving individual entrepreneurial practice. This continuum in forms of economic organization has limited structural reform strategies in medicine for the remainder of the century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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