35 results on '"Birch, Stephen"'
Search Results
2. General population preferences for cancer care in health systems of China: A discrete choice experiment.
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Zhang, Nan, Chang, Xuan, Liu, Ruyue, Zheng, Caiyun, Wang, Xin, and Birch, Stephen
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CANCER treatment ,MEDICAL care ,DISCRETE systems ,WILLINGNESS to pay ,PROBABILITY measures ,MEDICAL care wait times - Abstract
Background: The increasing incidence of cancer in China has posed considerable challenges for cancer care delivery systems. This study aimed to determine the general population's preferences for cancer care, to provide evidence for building a people‐centered integrated cancer care system. Methods: We conducted a discrete choice experiment that involved 1,200 participants in Shandong Province. Individuals were asked to choose between cancer care scenarios based on the type and level of hospitals, with various out‐of‐pocket costs, waiting time, and contact working in the hospitals. Individual preferences, willingness to pay, and uptake rate were estimated using a mixed‐logit model. Results: This study included 848 respondents (70.67%). Respondents preferred county hospitals with shorter hospitalization waiting times and contact working in hospitals. Compared to the reference levels, the three highest willingness to pay values were related to waiting time for hospitalization (¥97,857.69–¥145411.70–¥212,992.10/$14512.70–$21565.16–$31587.61), followed by the county‐level hospital (¥32,545.13/$4826.58). The preferences of the different groups of respondents were diverse. Based on a county‐level general hospital with contact in the hospital, 50% out‐of‐pocket costs and a waiting time of 15 days, the probability of seeking baseline care was 0.37. Reducing the waiting time from 15 to 7, 3, and 0 days, increases the probability of choosing a county‐level hospital from 0.37 to 0.58, 0.64, and 0.70, respectively. Conclusions: This study suggests that there is a substantial interest in attending county‐level hospitals and that reducing hospitalization waiting time is the most effective measure to increase the probability of seeking cancer care in county‐level hospitals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Student-resourced service delivery of occupational therapy rehabilitation groups: patient, clinician and student perspectives about the ingredients for success.
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Patterson, Freyr, Doig, Emmah, Fleming, Jenny, Strong, Jenny, Birch, Stephen, Whitehead, Mary, Laracy, Sue, Fitzgerald, Cate, Tornatore, Giovanna, McKenzie, Amy, Searles, Jacqueline, and Pigott, Amanda
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EVALUATION of medical care ,RESEARCH ,MEDICAL rehabilitation ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,RESEARCH methodology ,CLIENT relations ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENTS ,INTERVIEWING ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,INTERNSHIP programs ,HUMAN services programs ,QUALITATIVE research ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy services ,HEALTH care teams ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,STUDENT attitudes ,CONTENT analysis ,GROUP process ,SUCCESS ,CORPORATE culture ,CLINICAL education - Abstract
A number of innovative models of student practice placements are emerging due to pressures on universities to provide quality practice placements and on health services to deliver rehabilitation efficiently, safely and cost-effectively. The student-resourced service delivery (SRSD) group program is one such model in occupational therapy. There is a paucity of research evidence to guide services in planning, implementing and evaluating the SRSD model. The study aimed to explore and identify the factors that key stakeholders perceived as contributing to the successful development and implementation of the occupational therapy student-resourced service delivery group programs. Participants in this multi-site study were rehabilitation inpatients, clinicians, Clinical Education Liaison Managers and students completing practice placement in the student-resourced service delivery group program. Data were collected using face-to-face semi-structured interviews and focus groups. A total of 83 participants consented to the study. Four themes emerged from the data. Planning needs to be an iterative process that commences before and continues during the program. Support processes need to be established for students and clinicians during and across placements. The creation of an engaging, client-relevant and graded group dynamic is critical for success. Establishing a culture whereby groups are valued by the clients, therapy and multidisciplinary teams is important. The above-mentioned factors were perceived as contributing to successful operationalisation of a student-resourced service delivery group program, and may be helpful when developing student-resourced service delivery professional practice placements in other settings. Student-resourced service delivery of groups are one way to achieve additional professional practice placements for students and delivery of therapy services for patients. Ongoing investment for planning and preparation, provision of continual support for students, a culture of valuing groups and students, and creating a group dynamic that engages group participants were perceived by stakeholders as key ingredients for successful implementation of the student-resourced service delivery group model. Clinicians and educators are encouraged to use the perceived success factors identified in this study as a resource for future student-resourced service delivery program development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Physiotherapy student clinical placements in Australian private practice: Patient‐reported outcomes with supervised student care.
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Chia, Ruo Xin, Gomersall, Sjaan R., Fooken, Jonas, Birch, Stephen, Dinsdale, Alana, Dunwoodie, Ruth, and Forbes, Roma
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PHYSICAL therapy students ,MEDICAL rehabilitation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CROSS-sectional method ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PATIENTS ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,INTERNSHIP programs ,STUDENTS ,MEDICAL referrals ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL practice ,SUPERVISION of employees ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DATA analysis software ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background and purpose: The sustainability of physiotherapy clinical placements is an ongoing challenge, yet there is potential to increase placement capacity within the private practice sector. Barriers to hosting students, including perceived impacts on patient care, reportedly limit the uptake of hosting students within this setting. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of physiotherapy student involvement on patient‐reported Global Rating of Change (GRoC) in Australian physiotherapy private practice care. Methods: A cross‐sectional, patient survey study was conducted in three private physiotherapy practices over two 5‐week periods. At their completion of care, participants completed the survey seeking demographic information, GRoC and aspects of care including number of consultations involving students, proportion of physiotherapy time involving students and frequency of student involvement in treatment delivery. After accounting for clinic‐level differences, ordinal logistic regression analyses were performed to explore the impact of supervised student care on GRoC. Results: 119 participants across three practices completed the survey. There were no significant associations between patient‐reported GRoC and: (1) student involvement in patient care; (2) number of consultations involving students; (3) proportion of physiotherapy time involving students; or (4) frequency of student involvement in treatment delivery (p > 0.05). Conclusions: Supervised student care in private physiotherapy practice does not appear to have a detrimental impact on patient‐reported outcomes. These findings may address concerns relating to student involvement in patient care within this setting. Future research should address economic and service delivery impacts of supervised student care on private practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Planning the oral health workforce: Time for innovation.
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Birch, Stephen, Ahern, Susan, Brocklehurst, Paul, Chikte, Usuf, Gallagher, Jennifer, Listl, Stefan, Lalloo, Ratilal, O'Malley, Lucy, Rigby, Janet, Tickle, Martin, Tomblin Murphy, Gail, and Woods, Noel
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CULTURE , *DENTAL technology , *DENTISTS , *HEALTH services accessibility , *LABOR supply , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *MEDICAL care costs , *HEALTH policy , *HUMAN services programs , *ORAL health - Abstract
The levels and types of oral health problems occurring in populations change over time, while advances in technology change the way oral health problems are addressed and the ways care is delivered. These rapid changes have major implications for the size and mix of the oral health workforce, yet the methods used to plan the oral health workforce have remained rigid and isolated from planning of oral healthcare services and healthcare expenditures. In this paper, we argue that the innovation culture that has driven major developments in content and delivery of oral health care must also be applied to planning the oral health workforce if we are to develop 'fit for purpose' healthcare systems that meet the needs of populations in the 21st century. An innovative framework for workforce planning is presented focussed on responding to changes in population needs, service developments for meeting those needs and optimal models of care delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. Sustainability of Publicly Funded Health Care Systems: What Does Behavioural Economics Offer?
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Connelly, Luke B. and Birch, Stephen
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MEDICAL care use , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL care costs , *MEDICAL economics , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
There has been a rapid increase in the use of behavioural economics (BE) as a tool for policy makers to deploy, including in health-related applications. While this development has occurred over the past decade, health care systems have continued to struggle with escalating costs. We consider the potential role of BE for making improvements to health care system performance and the sustainability of publicly funded health care systems, in particular. We argue that the vast majority of applications in this field have been largely focussed on BE and public health, or the prevailing level of risks to health in populations, and with policy proposals to 'nudge' individual behaviour (e.g. in respect of dietary choices). Yet, improvements in population health may have little, if any, impact on the size, cost or efficiency of health care systems. Few applications of BE have focussed on the management, production, delivery or utilisation of health care services per se. The latter is our focus in this paper. We review the contributions on BE and health care and consider the potential for complementing the considerable work on BE and public health with a clear agenda for behavioural health care economics. This agenda should complement the work of conventional microeconomics in the health care sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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7. A scoping review of research to assess the frequency, types, and reasons for end-of-life care setting transitions.
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Wilson, Donna M. and Birch, Stephen
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CAUSES of death , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *MEDICAL care use , *NURSING care facilities , *PATIENTS , *TERMINAL care , *TERMINALLY ill , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Aims: Most people approaching the end of life develop care needs, which typically change over time. Moves between care settings may be required as health deteriorates. However, in some cases, care setting transitions may have little to do with end-of-life care needs and instead reflect the needs, demands, availability, or funding provisions of the country or funding body and organizations providing care. This paper is a scoping review of the international peer-reviewed research literature to gain evidence on the frequency and types of end-of-life care setting transitions, and the reasons for these moves. Methods: All relevant print and open access research articles published in 2000+ were sought using the Directory of Open Access Journals and EBSCO Discovery Host. Results: A total of 39 research articles were identified and reviewed. However, minimal useful evidence was revealed. Most articles focused solely on hospital admissions near death, and some focused on nursing home admissions, with other moves infrequently studied. Conclusions: This review demonstrates the need to quantify and justify end-of-life care setting transitions as it appears dying people are frequently moved, often as death nears. This research is needed to distinguish transitions related to end-of-life care needs and those arising from pressures on or from care providers and others unrelated to the person's care needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. The Luohu Model: A Template for Integrated Urban Healthcare Systems in China.
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Xin Wang, Xizhuo Sun, Fangfang Gong, Yixiang Huang, Lijin Chen, Yong Zhang, and Birch, Stephen
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MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Introduction: Emerging from the epidemiological transition and accelerated aging process, China's fragmentated healthcare systems struggle to meet the demands of the population. On Sept 1
st 2017, China's National Health and Family Planning Commission encouraged all cities to learn from the Luohu model of integration adopted in Luohu as an approach to meeting these challenges. In this paper, we study the integration process, analyze the core mechanisms, and conduct preliminary evaluations of integrated policy development in the Luohu model. Policy development: The Luohu hospital group was established in Aug 2015, consists of five district hospitals, 23 community health stations and an institute of precision medicine. The group adopted a series of professional, organizational, system, functional and normative strategies for integrated care, which was provided for the residents of Luohu, especially for the elderly population and patients with chronic conditions. According to a preliminary evaluation of the past two years, the Luohu model showed improvement in the structure and process towards integrated care. New preventive programs conducted in the hospital group resulted in changes of disease incidence. Residents were more satisfied with the Luohu model. However, spending exceeded the global budget for health insurance because of short-term increases in the demand for health care. Lessons learned: First, engagement of multiple stakeholders is essential for the design and implementation of reform. Second, organizational integration is a prerequisite for integrated care in China. Third, effective care integration requires alignment with payment reforms. Fourth, normative integration could promote collaboration in an integrated healthcare system. Conclusion: Core strategies and mechanisms of the Luohu model will promote integrated care in urban China and other countries facing the same challenges. However, it is necessary to study the effects of the Luohu model over the long term and continue to strive for integrated care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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9. Moving from place to place in the last year of life: A qualitative study identifying care setting transition issues and solutions in Ontario.
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Wilson, Donna M. and Birch, Stephen
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MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL personnel , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *GROUNDED theory , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL protocols , *MEDICAL practice , *RESEARCH funding , *TERMINAL care , *EMPLOYEES' workload , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DATA analysis , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Moving from one care setting to another is common as death nears. Many concerns exist over these end‐of‐life (EOL) care setting transitions, including low‐quality moves as mistakes and other mishaps can occur. Delayed or denied moves are also problematic, such as a move out of hospital for dying inpatients who want to spend their last hours or days at home. The aim of the study was to identify current issues or problems with care setting transitions during the last year of life as well as potential or actual solutions for these problems. A grounded theory analysis approach was used based on interviews with 38 key informants who represent a wide range of healthcare providers, healthcare managers, government representatives, lawyers, healthcare recipients and their family/friends across Ontario in 2016. Three interrelated themes were revealed: (a) communication complexities, (b) care planning and coordination gaps and (c) health system reform needs. Six solutions were highlighted, with these designed to prevent care setting transition issues and monitor care setting transitions for continued improvements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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10. From population numbers to population needs: Incorporating epidemiological change into health service planning in Australia.
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Lenzen, Sabrina and Birch, Stephen
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REPORT writing , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL care costs , *SIMULATION methods in education , *HEALTH status indicators , *SURVEYS , *AGING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *NEEDS assessment , *GOVERNMENT aid , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
In the face of rapidly ageing populations and increasing costs of health care provision, questions continue to be raised about the long-term sustainability of publicly funded health care programmes around the world. But despite increasing evidence of dynamic changes in epidemiology, most official health service planning models continue to rely on the implicit assumption that age-specific requirements for services (and by implication age-specific needs for care) will remain constant across future years ('constant-use models'). In this paper, we discuss the advantage of dynamic 'changing needs' planning models, compared to 'constant-use' planning models, and consider a framework that integrates population needs directly into health service planning. Using Australian survey data, we empirically illustrate the difference between static health service planning approaches to dynamic needs-driven planning models. We use data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics Survey in Australia (HILDA) to explore trends in health needs from 2001 to 2020. We subsequently simulate a 'changing-needs' planning model where changes in health needs by birth-cohorts are incorporated into official government estimates from the Australian Intergenerational Reports (IGR) to understand the potential impact on future health care requirements. Our results show that healthy ageing trends are being observed for successive birth-cohorts with these trends greatest in older age groups, the age groups for which health care expenditures are largest. Adjusting for these changes in needs using Australian data leads to reductions in the expenditures required for future years ranging from 1.5 (2.50%) to 3 billion (5.25%) 2019 AUD. We conclude that 'constant-use' planning models based on the expected future numbers of people in different age groups applied to current levels of service use by age groups without any consideration given to changing age-specific needs for health care lead to inefficient resource planning. • We discuss the advantages of dynamic needs-driven health service planning models. • We use 19 waves of longitudinal data from Australia. • We study changes in health status among birth cohorts by age group. • We find healthy ageing trends among people aged 65 and over. • Accounting for changing needs leads to reductions in future spending estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Does capitation affect the delivery of oral healthcare and access to services? Evidence from a pilot contact in Northern Ireland.
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Hill, Harry, Birch, Stephen, Tickle, Martin, McDonald, Ruth, Donaldson, Michael, O'Carolan, Donncha, and Brocklehurst, Paul
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CAPITATION fees (Medical care) , *PRACTICE of dentistry , *MEDICAL care , *COST of dental care , *TWENTY-first century , *DENTAL economics , *DENTAL care , *DENTISTS , *HEALTH services accessibility , *INCOME , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MEDICAL care costs , *PRIMARY health care , *USER charges , *PILOT projects , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *FEE for service (Medical fees) ,NORTHERN Ireland politics & government - Abstract
Background: In May 2009, the Northern Ireland government introduced General Dental Services (GDS) contracts based on capitation in dental practices newly set up by a corporate dental provider to promote access to dental care in populations that had previously struggled to secure service provision. Dental service provision forms an important component of general health services for the population, but the implications of health system financing on care delivered and the financial cost of services has received relatively little attention in the research literature. The aim of this study is to evaluate the policy effect capitation payment in recently started corporate practices had on the delivery of primary oral healthcare in Northern Ireland and access to services.Methods: We analysed the policy initiative in Northern Ireland as a natural experiment to find the impact on healthcare delivery of the newly set up corporate practices that use a prospective capitation system to remunerate primary care dentists. Data was collected from GDS claim forms submitted to the Business Services Organisation (BSO) between April 2011 and October 2014. Health and Social Care Board (HSCB) practices operating within a capitation system were matched to a control group, who were remunerated using a retrospective fee-for-service system.Results: No evidence of patient selection was found in the HSCB practices set up by a corporate provider and operated under capitation. However, patients were less likely to visit the dentist and received less treatment when they did attend, compared to those belonging to the control group (P < 0.05). The extent of preventive activity offered and the patient payment charge revenue did not differ between the two practice groups.Conclusion: Although remunerating NHS primary care dentists in newly set up corporate practices using a prospective capitation system managed costs within healthcare, there is evidence that this policy may have reduced access to care of registered patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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12. Appropriateness-based reimbursement of elective invasive coronary procedures in low- and middle-income countries: Preliminary assessment of feasibility in India.
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KARTHIKEYAN, GANESAN, SHIRODKAR, UMESH, RAJIVLOCHAN, MEETA, and BIRCH, STEPHEN
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MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH insurance - Abstract
Background. Elective coronary interventional procedures are often overused and sometimes inappropriately used. The incentives for overuse are greater in low- and middle-income countries, where much of healthcare is provided by poorly regulated, fee-for-service systems. Overuse and inappropriate use increase healthcare costs and are potentially harmful to patients. Linking appropriate use of elective procedures to their reimbursement might deter overuse. Methods. We explored the feasibility of introducing appropriateness criteria as a precondition to settling reimbursement claims in a publicly funded health insurance scheme in Maharashtra, India. Clinical algorithms were developed from the current best-practice criteria and used to determine appropriateness at the time of obtaining pre-authorization for elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgeries. The number of PCIs as a proportion of the total number of procedures reimbursed under the scheme was the primary outcome measure. This proportion was compared for 1-year periods before and after implementation of appropriateness-based reimbursement, using the chi-square test. Comparisons were also made separately for public and private hospitals. The change in the proportion of CABG surgeries over the same time periods was used as a comparator (as they are less subject to inappropriate use). Results. The insurance scheme provided cover to a population of 20 424 585 (18.2% of the population of Maharashtra) in 8 districts, through 106 hospitals (73 private and 33 public). There was a 12.3% (95% CI 8.9%-15.5%, p=0.0001) reduction in the proportion of PCIs performed in the 1-year period after the introduction of appropriateness-based reimbursement. The reduction was similar for public and private hospitals. There was no significant change in the proportion of CABG surgeries (2.3% v. 2.2%, p=0.20). At current rates, use of appropriateness-based reimbursement would result in approximately 783 (95% CI 483-1099) less PCIs with potential annual savings of about ₹57 million (US$ 0.93 million; 95% CI 0.57-1.3) to the government scheme. Conclusions. It seems feasible to implement an appropriateness-based system for reimbursement of elective coronary interventional procedures in a government-funded health insurance scheme in a developing country. This potentially cost-saving approach may reduce inappropriate use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
13. Coordination of care in the Chinese health care systems: a gap analysis of service delivery from a provider perspective.
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Xin Wang, Birch, Stephen, Weiming Zhu, Huifen Ma, Embrett, Mark, and Qingyue Meng
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MEDICAL care use , *DISEASE prevalence , *POPULATION aging , *MEDICAL care , *GAP analysis (Planning) - Abstract
Background: Increases in health care utilization and costs, resulting from the rising prevalence of chronic conditions related to the aging population, is exacerbated by a high level of fragmentation that characterizes health care systems in China. There have been several pilot studies in China, aimed at system-level care coordination and its impact on the full integration of health care system, but little is known about their practical effects. Huangzhong County is one of the pilot study sites that introduced organizational integration (a dimension of integrated care) among health care institutions as a means to improve system-level care coordination. The purposes of this study are to examine the effect of organizational integration on system-level care coordination and to identify factors influencing care coordination and hence full integration of county health care systems in rural China. Methods: We chose Huangzhong and Hualong counties in Qinghai province as study sites, with only Huangzhong having implemented organizational integration. A mixed methods approach was used based on (1) document analysis and expert consultation to develop Best Practice intervention packages; (2) doctor questionnaires, identifying care coordination from the perspective of service provision. We measured service provision with gap index, overlap index and over-provision index, by comparing observed performance with Best Practice; (3) semi-structured interviews with Chiefs of Medicine in each institution to identify barriers to system-level care coordination. Results: Twenty-nine institutions (11 at county-level, 6 at township-level and 12 at village-level) were selected producing surveys with a total of 19 schizophrenia doctors, 23 diabetes doctors and 29 Chiefs of Medicine. There were more care discontinuities for both diabetes and schizophrenia in Huangzhong than in Hualong. Overall, all three index scores (measuring service gaps, overlaps and over-provision) showed similar tendencies for the two conditions. The gap indices of schizophrenia (> 5.10) were bigger for diabetes (< 2.60) in both counties. The over-provision indices of schizophrenia (> 3.25) were bigger than diabetes (< 1.80) in both counties. Overlap indices for the two conditions exceeded justified overlaps, especially for diabetes. Gap index scores for schizophrenia interventions at the township-level and over-provision index scores for diabetes interventions at both village- and township-level showed big differences between the two counties. Insufficient medical staff with appropriate competencies, lack of motivation for care coordination and related supportive policies as well as unconnected information system were identified as barriers to system-level care coordination in both counties. Conclusion: Findings demonstrate that organizational integration in Huangzhong has not achieved a higher level of care coordination at this stage. System-level care coordination is most problematic at village-level institutions in Hualong, but at county-level institutions in Huangzhong. These findings suggest that attention be given to other aspects of integration (e.g., clinical and service integration) to promote system-level care coordination and contribute to the full integration of health care system in the pilot county. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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14. Economic evaluation of diagnostic methods used in dentistry. A systematic review.
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Christeil, Helena, Birch, Stephen, Horner, Keith, Lindh, Christina, and Rohlin, Madeleine
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DENTISTRY , *MEDICAL economics , *MEDICAL protocols , *MEDICAL care , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *MEDICAL practice , *DATA extraction - Abstract
Objectives: To review the literature of economic evaluations regarding diagnostic methods used in dentistry. Data sources: Four databases (MEDLINE, Web of Science, The Cochrane library, the NHS Economic Evaluation Database) were searched for studies, complemented by hand search, until February 2013. Study selection: Two authors independently screened all titles or abstracts and then applied inclusion and exclusion criteria to select full-text publications published in English, which reported an economic evaluation comparing at least two alternative methods. Studies of diagnostic methods were assessed by four reviewers using a protocol based on the QUADAS tool regarding diagnostic methods and a check-list for economic evaluations. The results of the data extraction were summarized in a structured table and as a narrative description. Results: From 476 identified full-text publications, 160 were considered to be economic evaluations. Only 12 studies (7%) were on diagnostic methods, whilst 78 studies (49%) were on prevention and 70 (40%) on treatment. Among studies on diagnostic methods, there was between-study heterogeneity methodologically, regarding the diagnostic method analysed and type of economic evaluation addressed. Generally, the choice of economic evaluation method was not justified and the perspective of the study not stated. Costing of diagnostic methods varied. Conclusions: A small body of literature addresses economic evaluation of diagnostic methods in dentistry. Thus, there is a need for studies from various perspectives with welldefined research questions and measures of the cost and effectiveness. Clinical significance: Economic resources in healthcare are finite. For diagnostic methods, an understanding of efficacy provides only part of the information needed for evidence-based practice. This study highlighted a paucity of economic evaluations of diagnostic methods used in dentistry, indicating that much of what we practise lacks sufficient evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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15. Managing moral hazard in motor vehicle accident insurance claims.
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Ebrahim, Shanil, Busse, Jason W, Guyatt, Gordon H, and Birch, Stephen
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TRAFFIC accidents ,INSURANCE policies ,OBLIGATIONS (Law) ,BENEFICIARIES ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Motor vehicle accident (MVA) insurance in Canada is based primarily on two different compensation systems: (i) no-fault, in which policyholders are unable to seek recovery for losses caused by other parties (unless they have specified dollar or verbal thresholds) and (ii) tort, in which policyholders may seek general damages. As insurance companies pay for MVA-related health care costs, excess use of health care services may occur as a result of consumers' (accident victims) and/or producers' (health care providers) behavior - often referred to as the moral hazard of insurance. In the United States, moral hazard is greater for low dollar threshold no-fault insurance compared with tort systems. In Canada, high dollar threshold or pure no-fault versus tort systems are associated with faster patient recovery and reduced MVA claims. These findings suggest that high threshold no-fault or pure no-fault compensation systems may be associated with improved outcomes for patients and reduced moral hazard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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16. Unequal access to ART: exploratory results from rural and urban case studies of ART use.
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Cleary, Susan May, Birch, Stephen, Moshabela, Mosa, and Schneider, Helen
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ANTIRETROVIRAL agents , *DRUG accessibility , *RURAL health services , *HEALTH facilities , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
Introduction South Africa has the world's largest antiretroviral treatment (ART) programme. While services in the public sector are free at the point of use, little is known about overall access barriers. This paper explores these barriers from the perspective of ART users enrolled in services in two rural and two urban settings. Methods Using a comprehensive framework of access, interviews were conducted with over 1200 ART users to assess barriers along three dimensions: availability, affordability and acceptability. Summary statistics were computed and comparisons of access barriers between sites were explored using multivariate linear and logistic regressions. Results While availability access barriers in rural settings were found to be mitigated through a more decentralised model of service provision in one site, affordability barriers were considerably higher in rural versus urban settings. 50% of respondents incurred catastrophic healthcare expenditure and 36% borrowed money to cover these expenses in one rural site. On acceptability, rural users were less likely to report feeling respected by health workers. Stigma was reported to be lowest in the two sites with the most decentralised services and the highest coverage of those in need. Conclusions While results suggest inequitable access to ART for rural relative to urban users, nurse-led services offered through primary healthcare facilities mitigated these barriers in one rural site. This is an important finding given current policy emphasis on decentralised and nurse-led ART in South Africa. This study is one of the first to present comprehensive evidence on access barriers to assist in the design of policy solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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17. An Applied Simulation Model for Estimating the Supply of and Requirements for Registered Nurses Based on Population Health Needs.
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Murphy, Gail Tomblin, Mackenzie, Adrian, Alder, Robert, Birch, Stephen, Kephart, George, and O'Brien-Pallas, Linda
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MEDICAL care ,POPULATION aging ,BUDGET ,TECHNOLOGY ,NURSES ,SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
Aging populations, limited budgets, changing public expectations, new technologies, and the emergence of new diseases create challenges for health care systems as ways to meet needs and protect, promote, and restore health are considered. Traditional planning methods for the professionals required to provide these services have given little consideration to changes in the needs of the populations they serve or to changes in the amount/types of services offered and the way they are delivered. In the absence of dynamic planning models that simulate alternative policies and test policy mixes for their relative effectiveness, planners have tended to rely on projecting prevailing or arbitrarily determined target provider-population ratios. A simulation model has been developed that addresses each of these shortcomings by simultaneously estimating the supply of and requirements for registered nurses based on the identification and interaction of the determinants. The model's use is illustrated using data for Nova Scotia, Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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18. Human Resources Planning and the Production of Health: A Needs-Based Analytical Framework.
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Birch, Stephen, Kephart, George, Tomblin-Murphy, Gail, O'Brien-Pallas, Linda, Alder, Rob, and MacKenzie, Adrian
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WORKFORCE planning , *PERSONNEL management , *MEDICAL quality control , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH planning ,INDUSTRIAL productivity measurement - Abstract
Traditional approaches to health human resources planning emphasize the effects of demographic change on the needs for health human resources. Planning requirements are largely based on the size and demographic mix of the population applied to simple population-provider or population-utilization ratios. We develop an extended analytical framework based on the production of health-care services and the multiple determinants of health human resource requirements. The requirements for human resources are shown to depend on four separate elements: demography, epidemiology, standards of care, and provider productivity. The application of the framework is illustrated using hypothetical scenarios for the population of the combined provinces of Atlantic Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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19. Information created to evade reality (ICER): things we should not look to for answers.
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Birch, Stephen and Gafni, Amiram
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MEDICAL economics , *COST effectiveness , *COST analysis , *MEDICAL care costs , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH , *GROUP decision making , *PHARMACY , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
Cost-effectiveness analysis has been advocated in the health economics methods literature and adopted in a growing number of jurisdictions as an evidence base for decision makers charged with maximising health gains from available resources. This paper critically appraises the information generated by cost-effectiveness analysis, in particular the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). It is shown that this ratio is used as comparative information on what are non-comparable options and hence evades the reality of the decision-maker's problem. The theoretical basis for the ICER approach is the simplification of theoretical assumptions that have no relevance to the decision maker's context. Although alternative, well established methods can be used for addressing the decision maker's problem, faced with the increasing evidence of the theoretical and empirical failures of the cost-effectiveness approach, some proponents of the approach now propose changing the research question to suit the approach as opposed to adopting a more appropriate method for the prevailing and continuing problem. As long as decision makers are concerned with making the best use of available healthcare resources, cost-effectiveness analysis and the ICER should not be where we look for answers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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20. ACHIEVEMENTS AND CHALLENGES OF MEDICARE IN CANADA: ARE WE THERE YET? ARE WE ON COURSE?
- Author
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Birch, Stephen and Gafni, Amiram
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC spending - Abstract
Health care policy in Canada is based on providing public funding for medically necessary physician and hospital-based services free at the point of delivery ("first-dollar public funding"). Studies consistently show that the introduction of public funding to support the provision of health care services free at the point of delivery is associated with increases in the proportionate share of services used by the poor and in population distributions of services that are independent of income. Claims about the success of Canada's health care policy tend to be based on these findings, without reference to medical necessity. This article adopts a needs-based perspective to reviewing the distribution of health care services. Despite the removal of user prices, significant barriers remain to services being distributed in accordance with need--the objective of needs-based access to services remains elusive. The increased fiscal pressures imposed on health care in the 1990s, together with the failure of health care policy to encompass the changing nature of health care delivery, seem to represent further departures from policy objectives. In addition, there is evidence of increasing public dissatisfaction with the performance of the system. A return to modest increases in public funding in the new millennium has not been sufficient to arrest these trends. Widespread support for first-dollar public funding needs to be accompanied by greater attention to the scope of the legislation and the adoption of a needs-based focus among health care policymakers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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- View/download PDF
21. Developing Management Information from an Administrative Database of Dental Services: Identifying Factors that Influence Costs.
- Author
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Leake, James L., Birch, Stephen, Main, Patricia A., and Ho, Elsa
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DENTAL records ,COMMUNICATION in dentistry ,CONSUMER price indexes ,UTILIZATION review (Medical care) ,MEDICAL care ,DENTISTRY ,DENTAL care ,ORAL medicine ,DENTAL insurance - Abstract
Objective: We describe service patterns and compare changes in program expenditures with the Consumer Price Index over eight years in a dental program with a controlled-fee schedule offered to Canadian First Nations and Inuit people. Methods: We obtained the computerized records of dental services for the period from 1994 to 2001. Each record identified the date and type of service, region and type of provider, age of the client and encrypted identifying information on clients, bands, and providers. We classified the individual services into related types (diagnostic, preventive, etc.). We aggregated the records by client and developed indices for the numbers of clients, mean numbers of services per client, cost per service, and prices. Findings: Over the 8 years, 16.0 million procedures, totaling $811.8 million, were provided to 538,034 different individuals, approximately 76% of the eligible population. Restorative procedures accounted for 36% of alt expenditures followed by diagnostic (12.7%). preventive (12.2%). and orthodontic (8.9%) services. For much of the period, increases in program expenditures were exceeded by increases in the Consumer Price Index. This was consistent with fewer services per client, a less expensive mix of services, and relatively flat prices. However, in 2000 and 2001 higher prices and more clients resulted in increasing expenditures. Conclusions: Program expenditures were influenced by different factors over the study period. In the final two years, increasing expenditures were driven by price increases and increasing numbers of clients, but not by increasing numbers of services per client, nor a ‘richer’ mix of services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Diabetes Continuity of Care Scale: the development and initial evaluation of a questionnaire that measures continuity of care from the patient perspective.
- Author
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Dolovich, Lisa R., Nair, Kalpana M., Ciliska, Donna K., Lee, Hui N., Birch, Stephen, Gafni, Amiram, and Hunt, Dereck L.
- Subjects
DIABETES ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH care industry ,FACTOR analysis ,MEDICAL personnel ,PEOPLE with diabetes - Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to develop and pilot test a questionnaire to assess continuity of care from the perspective of patients with diabetes. Seven patient and two healthcare-provider focus groups were conducted. These focus groups generated 777 potential items. This number was reduced to 56 items after item reduction, face validity testing and readability analysis, and to 47 items after a preliminary factor analysis. Readability was assessed as requiring 7–8 years of schooling. Sixty adult patients with diabetes completed the draft Diabetes Continuity of Care Scale (DCCS) at a single point in time to assess the validity of the instrument. Patients completed the draft DCCS again 2 weeks later to assess test–retest reliability. A provisional factor analysis and grouping according to clinical sense yielded five domains: access and getting care, care by doctor, care by other healthcare professionals, communication between healthcare professionals, and self-care. The internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) for the whole scale was 0.89. The test–retest reliability wasr = 0.73. The DCCS total score was moderately correlated with some of the measures used to establish construct validity. The DCCS could differentiate between patients who did and did not achieve specific process and clinical indicators of good diabetes care (e.g. Hba1c tested within 6 months). The development of the DCCS was centred on the patient's perspective and revealed that the patient perspective regarding continuity of care extends beyond the concept of seeing one doctor. Initial testing of this instrument demonstrates that it has promise as a reliable and valid measure in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
23. Addressing the realties of health care in northern aboriginal communities through participatory action research.
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Minore, Bruce, Boone, Margaret, Katt, Mae, Kinch, Peggy, and Birch, Stephen
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INDIGENOUS peoples ,MEDICAL care ,CONTINUUM of care ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,MEDICAL care research ,MEDICAL care costs ,ONCOLOGY - Abstract
To address concerns about disruptions in the continuity of health care delivered to residents in three remote aboriginal communities in northern Ontario, Canada, the local health authority initiated a study in collaboration with the department of Health Canada responsible for ensuring that aboriginal reserves receive mandatory health services, and an inter-disciplinary team of researchers from two universities. The study focussed on the delivery of oncology, diabetes and mental health care, specifically, as well as systems issues such as recruitment and retention of health human resources and financial costs. The paper discusses the procedures involved, the benefits derived and the challenges encountered in doing this as a community driven participatory action research project. It also summarizes the findings that led to community formulated policy and program recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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24. Beyond demographic change in human resources planning: an extended framework and application to nursing.
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Birch, Stephen, O'Brien-Pallas, Linda, Alksnis, Chris, Tomblin Murphy, Gail, and Thomson, Donna
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- *
HUMAN capital , *PERSONNEL management , *MEDICAL care , *HOSPITALS , *NURSES - Abstract
Objectives: To introduce health care production functions into human resources planning and to apply the approach to analysing the need for registered nurses in Ontario during a period of major reduction in inpatient capacity. Methods: Measurement of changes in services delivered by acute care hospitals in Ontario between 1994/95 and 1998/99, and comparison with changes in the mix of human resources, non-human resources and patient needs. Results: Inpatient episodes per nurse fell by almost 2%. At the same time the number of beds was cut by over 20%. As a result, the number of patients per bed increased by 12%. Allowing for severity, there was a 20% reduction in beds per episode and a 3.7% reduction in nurses per episode. Conclusions: The demands on nurses in acute care hospitals have increased as an increasing number of severity-adjusted episodes are served using fewer beds by a reduced number of nurses. Human resources planning traditionally only considers the effects of demographic change on the need for and supply of health care. Failure to recognize the variable and endogenous nature of other health care inputs leads to false impressions about the adequacy of existing supplies of human resources. Consideration of human resources in the context of the production function for health services provides a meaningful way of improving the effectiveness and efficiency of human resources planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Valuing the benefits and costs of health care programmes: where's the ‘extra’ in extra-welfarism?
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Birch, Stephen and Donaldson, Cam
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- *
MEDICAL care , *HEALTH , *RESOURCE allocation - Abstract
The application of Sen''s notion of capabilities to problems of the allocation of resources to health in the form of an extra-welfarist framework underlies the justification of quality adjusted life years (QALYs) as the method for valuing the benefits of health care. In this paper we critically appraise this application from both conceptual and empirical perspectives. We show that the alleged limitations of the welfarist approach are essentially limitations in its application, not in the capacity of the approach to accommodate the concerns of extra-welfarists. Moreover, the arguments used to justify the application of the extra-welfarist framework are essentially welfarist. We demonstrate that the methods used to measure QALYs share their basic theoretical roots with welfarist valuation methods, such as willingness to pay (WTP). Although QALYs and WTP share many challenges, we argue that WTP provides a method which performs better with respect to those challenges. In the context of evaluating alternative allocations of health care resources we are left asking what is ‘extra’ in extra-welfarism? [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
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26. Needs-based primary medical care capitation: development and evaluation of alternative approaches.
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Hutchison, Brian, Hurley, Jeremiah, Birch, Stephen, Lomas, Jonathan, Walter, Stephen D., Eyles, John, Stratford-Devai, Fawne, Hutchison, B, Hurley, J, Birch, S, Lomas, J, Walter, S D, Eyles, J, and Stratford-Devai, F
- Subjects
PRIMARY health care ,CAPITATION fees (Medical care) ,COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL care ,MORTALITY ,PRIMARY care - Abstract
Objective: To develop and evaluate alternative methods of adjusting primary medical care capitation payments for variations in relative need for health care among enrolled practice populations.Methods: We developed alternative needs-based capitation formulae and applied them to a sample of capitation-funded primary care practices to assess each formula's performance against a reference standard of capitation payments based on age, sex and self-assessed health status of the enrolled populations. The alternative formulae were based on: (1) age and sex; (2) age, sex and individually-measured socioeconomic characteristics; (3) age, sex and socioeconomic characteristics imputed from census data for enrollees' neighbourhood of residence; (4) age, sex and standardized mortality ratio for enrollees' neighbourhood of residence.Results: Age/sex-adjusted capitation payments for the six practices studied ranged from 10% higher to 18% lower than the reference standard payments. Capitation formulae based on socioeconomic and mortality data did not perform consistently better than the current age/sex-based formula.Conclusions: Primary medical care capitation payments adjusted only for age and sex do not reflect the relative health care needs of enrolled practice populations. Our alternative formulae based on socioeconomic and mortality data also failed to reflect relative needs. Methods that use other approaches to adjusting for differences in relative need among enrolled populations should be investigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2000
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- View/download PDF
27. Fair shares for the zone: Allocating health-care resources for the native populations of the...
- Author
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Eyles, John and Birch, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL care , *RESOURCE allocation - Abstract
Explores issues on health-care resource allocation for a Canadian native population, that of Sioux Lookout Zone, within the context of the total provincial population. Rationale for a needs-based approach; Developing a needs-based approach; Native health conditions; Definition of the `fair share' concept; Results and discussion.
- Published
- 1994
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28. QALYs and HYEs Spotting the differences.
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Gafni, Amiram and Birch, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
CONSUMER preferences , *UTILITY functions , *HEALTH , *MEDICAL care , *THEORY , *MEDICAL economics - Abstract
The article reports that much attention has been given to the critical appraisal of the healthy years equivalent (HYE) concept as an alternative and superior approach to the measurement of preferences over probabilistic health states compared to quality-adjusted life year (QALY). The debate about relative merits of the HYE and the QALY has clarified some things but left many questions unanswered. Measuring HYE is likely to involve greater respondent burden mainly in terms of the number of questions being asked. In terms of the conceptual limitations of the HYE, it is noted that HYE definition imposes same restrictions as the QALY in terms of underlying assumptions of utility independence between health and other commodities in an individual's utility function. The HYE-QALY debate has demonstrated the need to understand clearly the nature of the problem and the objective being pursued in attempting to solve the problem of measurement of preference.
- Published
- 1997
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29. A Needs-based Approach to Resource Allocation in Health Care.
- Author
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Birch, Stephen, Eyles, John, Hurley, Jeremiah, Hutchison, Brian, and Chambers, Shelley
- Subjects
RESOURCE allocation ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH planning ,PUBLIC welfare ,PUBLIC welfare policy ,HEALTH policy ,RESOURCE management ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Public Policy is the property of University of Toronto Press 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
- 1993
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30. Incorporating Portfolio Uncertainty in Decision Rules for Healthcare Resource Allocation.
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Sendi, Pedram, Gafni, Amiram, Birch, Stephen, Walter, Stephen D., and Valdez, R. Burciaga
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RESOURCE allocation ,MEDICAL care costs ,RURAL health ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Cost-effectiveness analysis is widely adopted as a means to inform policy and decision makers in setting priorities for healthcare resource allocation. In resource-constrained settings, decision makers are confronted with healthcare resource reallocation decisions, e.g., moving funds from one or more existing healthcare programs to fund new healthcare programs. The decision-making plane (DMP) has been developed as a means to graphically present the results of reallocating available healthcare resources when healthcare program costs and effects are uncertain. Mapping a value function over the DMP allows the analyst to value all possible combinations of net costs and net effects that may result from reallocating available healthcare resources under conditions of uncertainty. In this paper, we extend this approach to include a change in portfolio risk, stemming from a change in the portfolios of funded healthcare programs, as an additional source of uncertainty, and demonstrate how this can be incorporated into the value function over net costs and net effects for a risk-averse decision maker. The methodology presented in this paper is of particular interest to decision makers who are risk averse, as it will help to better incorporate their preferences in the process of deciding how to best allocate scarce healthcare resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The NICE reference case requirement: more pain for what, if any, gain?
- Author
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Gafni, Amiram and Birch, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL technology , *COST analysis , *RESOURCE allocation , *DECISION making , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
The implications of the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) requirement for a reference case methodology for health technology assessments, are being considered. The validity of the estimates used in the reference case approach underlying the NICE recommendations are being questioned. In conclusion, the reference case requirement will be seen not as an aid in decision making--and from a resource allocation perspective, a possibly reasonable request--but as one more, poorly thought through hurdle to healthcare innovation.
- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
32. Coordination of care in the Chinese health systems: A gap analysis of service delivery from a provider perspective.
- Author
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Xin Wang, Qingyue Meng, and Birch, Stephen
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs ,DISEASE exacerbation ,CHRONIC disease treatment ,INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
Introduction: Increases in health care utilization and costs resulting from the rising prevalence of chronic conditions related to aging populations, is exacerbated by a high level of fragmentation that characterizes health care systems in China. There have been several pilot studies of structural integration, but not much is known about the impact on care coordination, which is an important aspect of healthcare system integration. The aims of this study are to (1) measure the influence of structural integration on care coordination in county-level health systems of rural China and (2) identify barriers to care coordination for promoting healthcare system integration among providers. Methods: Huangzhong and Hualong counties in Qinghai province were adopted as study sites, with only Huangzhong having implemented structural integration. In Huangzhong, all medical institutions were grouped into three vertical consortia with detailed cooperative agreements about patient referral, information sharing and joint training. A case-study method is employed with all institutions at the county level along with a stratified sample of 3 township health centers and 6 village health stations in each county, a total study sample of 29 institutions. In order to measure care coordination, schizophrenia and diabetes were adopted as two tracer conditions. The data about care coordination were collected using questionnaires for key informant doctors of the relevant departments in each institution. Based on "Best Practice guidelines" for two conditions developed by document analysis and expert consultation, gap analysis was used to analyze discontinuities in care covering, gaps in care, overlaps of care and over-provision of care for different types of interventions (prevention, screening, diagnose, treatment, rehabilitation and case management) at different levels of institutions. Interviews with institutional leaders were conducted for exploring barriers to care coordination. Results: There are more care discontinuities for both diabetes and schizophrenia in Huangzhong than in Hualong. Overall, all three index scores (gap, overlap and over-provision) showed similar tendencies between the two conditions. The gap indices of schizophrenia are bigger than diabetes in both counties. At the system level, overlap indices for the two conditions exceed justified overlap, especially for diabetes. Specifically, there are smaller gap index scores of schizophrenia interventions for township-level institutions in Hualong than in Hualong. However, a bigger over-provision index was found for diabetes interventions at both village- and township-level institutions in Huangzhong than in Hualong. Insufficient medical staff with appropriate competencies, lack of motivation for coordination and related supportive policies, unconnected information system are barriers to care coordination in both counties. Discussion: Results of the quantitative analysis did not show a significantly higher degree of care coordination in Huangzhong (with structural integration) than in Hualong (without structural integration). At the same time, the gap index and over-provision index scores displayed different shortcomings of the two health systems. The greatest weakness of the health system is the village-level institutions in Hualong, but at county-level institutions in Huangzhong. In terms of overlap, although the index score in Huangzhong is closer to Best Practice guidelines than in Hualong, there is much room for improvement in both counties. Although quantitative analysis did not show significant association between structural integration and care coordination, officials interviewed in Huangzhong suggested there were positive impacts on cooperation among institutions in each medical consortium. For instance, it is easier for patient referral and expert consultation. Conclusion: This study makes two contributions. First, gap analysis provides a methodology for broad use in health care systems to provide evidence on coordination from the perspective of providers. It can be used in other health care systems in China and other low-and-middle income countries, experiencing integration. Second, gap analysis identified barriers to bridge the gap, reduce over-provision and avoid overlap of interventions in both counties. Findings demonstrate that a higher level of care coordination has not been achieved by structural integration under the health care system setting of Huangzhong. It implies n that more effort is needed on other integration strategies, such as functional integration that encourages clinical and service integration, to achieve care coordination. The study was designed to measure care coordination by the number of interventions provided, without taking care quality into account. Satisfaction of patients for care coordination and their health outcomes in the long term are suggested in further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
33. Health Human Resources Policy in the 21st Century: Addressing the Complexities of Who Does What in a Canadian Context.
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Birch, Stephen and Bourgeault, Ivy Lynn
- Subjects
- *
PERSONNEL management , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
An introduction to the issue and its special theme of human resources in the health care industry of Canada is presented, with reference to articles on manpower planning, health care provider productivity, job satisfaction among nurses, and other topics.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Charging the patient to save the system? Like bailing water with a sieve.
- Author
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Birch, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL fees , *MEDICAL care costs , *USER charges , *TAX exemption , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH policy , *ECONOMICS , *NATIONAL health services , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Comments on the system of charging patients for health care in Canada. Way to raise any particular revenue target from patient charges; Suggestions to determine eligibility for health-user tax exemption status; Importance of considering the nature of any inappropriate use of health care.
- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
35. Optimizing a portfolio of health care programs in the presence of uncertainty and constrained resources
- Author
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Sendi, Pedram, Al, Maiwenn J., Gafni, Amiram, and Birch, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL care , *SOCIAL sciences , *MEDICINE - Abstract
Much research has been devoted to handling uncertainty in cost-effectiveness analysis. The current literature suggests summarizing uncertainty in cost-effectiveness analysis using acceptability curves or net health benefits. These approaches, however, focus only on uncertainty associated with costs and effects of the programs under consideration. In the real world, most decision-makers have to fund a portfolio of health care programs. Therefore, a more comprehensive approach would include in the analysis the uncertainty of costs and effects of all programs supported by the fixed budget. This paper extends the decision rule described by Birch and Gafni (J. Health Econ. 11(3) (1992) 279) within the context of a portfolio of programs when costs and effects are uncertain and resources constrained. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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