1. Strategic, value-based delivery in global health care: innovations at Harvard University and Brigham and Women's Hospital.
- Author
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Weintraub RL, Talbot J, ole-MoiYoi K, Wachter K, Sullivan E, House A, Baron J, Beals A, Beauvais S, and Rhatigan J
- Subjects
- Health Education, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Hospitals, University trends, Humans, Information Dissemination methods, Massachusetts, Models, Organizational, Organizations trends, Public Health statistics & numerical data, Public Health trends, Universities statistics & numerical data, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Diffusion of Innovation, Global Health, Hospitals, University statistics & numerical data, Universities organization & administration
- Abstract
Investments in global health have more than doubled over the past decade, generating a cadre of new institutions. To date, most of the funded research in global health has focused on discovery, and, more recently, on the development of new tools, which has tightened the implementation bottleneck. This article introduces the concept of global health delivery and the need to catalog and analyze current implementation efforts to bridge gaps in delivery. Global health delivery is complex and context-dependent and requires an interdisciplinary effort, including the application of strategic principles. Furthermore, delivery is necessary to ensure that the investments in research, discovery, and development generate value for patients and populations. This article discusses the application of value-based delivery to global health. It provides some examples of approaches to aggregating implicit knowledge to inform practice. With global health delivery, the aim is to transform global health scale-up from a series of well-intentioned but often disconnected efforts to a value-based movement based upon 21st-century technology, standards, and efficiency., (© 2011 Mount Sinai School of Medicine.)
- Published
- 2011
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