12 results on '"Estupinan-Romero, Francisco"'
Search Results
2. Work like a Doc: A comparison of regulations on residents' working hours in 14 high-income countries
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Maoz Breuer, Rina, Waitzberg, Ruth, Breuer, Adin, Cram, Peter, Bryndova, Lucie, Williams, Gemma A., Kasekamp, Kaija, Keskimaki, Ilmo, Tynkkynen, Liina-Kaisa, van Ginneken, Verena, Kovács, Eszter, Burke, Sara, McGlacken-Byrne, Domhnall, Norton, Carol, Whiston, Barbara, Behmane, Daiga, Grike, Ieva, Batenburg, Ronald, Albreh, Tit, Pribakovic, Rade, Bernal-Delgado, Enrique, Estupiñan-Romero, Francisco, Angulo-Pueyo, Ester, and Rose, Adam J.
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- 2023
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3. Early health system responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in Mediterranean countries: A tale of successes and challenges
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Waitzberg, Ruth, Hernández-Quevedo, Cristina, Bernal-Delgado, Enrique, Estupiñán-Romero, Francisco, Angulo-Pueyo, Ester, Theodorou, Mamas, Kantaris, Marios, Charalambous, Chrystala, Gabriel, Elena, Economou, Charalampos, Kaitelidou, Daphne, Konstantakopoulou, Olympia, Vildiridi, Lilian Venetia, Meshulam, Amit, de Belvis, Antonio Giulio, Morsella, Alisha, Bezzina, Alexia, Vincenti, Karen, Figueiredo Augusto, Gonçalo, Fronteira, Inês, Simões, Jorge, Karanikolos, Marina, Williams, Gemma, and Maresso, Anna
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- 2022
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4. Balancing financial incentives during COVID-19: A comparison of provider payment adjustments across 20 countries
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Waitzberg, Ruth, Gerkens, Sophie, Dimova, Antoniya, Bryndová, Lucie, Vrangbæk, Karsten, Jervelund, Signe Smith, Birk, Hans Okkels, Rajan, Selina, Habicht, Triin, Tynkkynen, Liina-Kaisa, Keskimäki, Ilmo, Or, Zeynep, Gandré, Coralie, Winkelmann, Juliane, Ricciardi, Walter, de Belvis, Antonio Giulio, Poscia, Andrea, Morsella, Alisha, Slapšinskaitė, Agnė, Miščikienė, Laura, Kroneman, Madelon, de Jong, Judith, Tambor, Marzena, Sowada, Christoph, Scintee, Silvia Gabriela, Vladescu, Cristian, Albreht, Tit, Bernal-Delgado, Enrique, Angulo-Pueyo, Ester, Estupiñán-Romero, Francisco, Janlöv, Nils, Mantwill, Sarah, Van Ginneken, Ewout, and Quentin, Wilm
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- 2022
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5. Within and across country variations in treatment of patients with heart failure and diabetes
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Or, Zeynep, Shatrov, Kosta, Penneau, Anne, Wodchis, Walter, Abiona, Olukorede, Blankart, Carl Rudolf, Bowden, Nicholas, Bernal-Delgado, Enrique, Knight, Hannah, Lorenzonl, Luca, Marino, Alberto, Papanicolas, Irene, Riley, Kristen, Pellet, Leila, Estupinan-Romero, Francisco, Gool, Kees van, and Figueroa, Jose F.
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Diabetes -- Care and treatment ,Medical care -- Quality management ,Heart failure -- Care and treatment ,Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective: To compare within-country variation of health care utilization and spending of patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) and diabetes across countries. Data Sources: Patient-level linked data sources compiled by the International Collaborative on Costs, Outcomes, and Needs in Care across nine countries: Australia, Canada, England, France, Germany, New Zealand, Spain, Switzerland, and the United States. Data Collection Methods: Patients were identified in routine hospital data with a primary diagnosis of CHF and a secondary diagnosis of diabetes in 2015/2016. Study Design: We calculated the care consumption of patients after a hospital admission over a year across the care pathway-ranging from primary care to home health nursing care. To compare the distribution of care consumption in each country, we use Gini coefficients, Lorenz curves, and female-male ratios for eight utilization and spending measures. Principal Findings: In all countries, rehabilitation and home nursing care were highly concentrated in the top decile of patients, while the number of drug prescriptions were more uniformly distributed. On average, the Gini coefficient for drug consumption is about 0.30 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.27-0.36), while it is, 0.50 (0.45-0.56) for primary care visits, and more than 0.75 (0.81-0.92) for rehabilitation use and nurse visits at home (0.78; 0.62-0.9). Variations in spending were more pronounced than in utilization. Compared to men, women spend more days at initial hospital admission (+5%, 1.01-1.06), have a higher number of prescriptions (+7%, 1.05-1.09), and substantially more rehabilitation and home care (+20% to 35%, 0.79-1.6, 0.99-1.64), but have fewer visits to specialists (-10%; 0.84-0.97). Conclusions: Distribution of health care consumption in different settings varies within countries, but there are also some common treatment patterns across all countries. Clinicians and policy makers need to look into these differences in care utilization by sex and care setting to determine whether they are justified or indicate suboptimal care. KEYWORDS care pathways, diabetes, gender, heart failure, inequalities, international comparisons, multimorbidity, What is known on this topic * Patients with similar health needs are treated very differently within countries. * Most cross-national studies examine variations in care use and resources for [...]
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- 2021
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6. International comparison of spending and utilization at the end of life for hip fracture patients
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Blankart, Carl Rudolf, Gool, Kees van, Papanicolas, Irene, Bernal-Delgado, Enrique, Bowden, Nicholas, Estupinan-Romero, Francisco, Gauld, Robin, Knight, Hannah, Abiona, Olukorede, Riley, Kristen, Schoenfeld, Andrew J., Shatrov, Kosta, Wodchis, Walter P., and Figueroa, Jose F.
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Medical care -- Utilization ,Medical care, Cost of -- Evaluation ,Hip joint -- Fractures ,Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective: To identify and explore differences in spending and utilization of key health services at the end of life among hip fracture patients across seven developed countries. Data Sources: Individual-level claims data from the inpatient and outpatient health care sectors compiled by the International Collaborative on Costs, Outcomes, and Needs in Care (ICCONIC). Study Design: We retrospectively analyzed utilization and spending from acute hospital care, emergency department, outpatient primary care and specialty physician visits, and outpatient drugs. Patterns of spending and utilization were compared in the last 30, 90, and 180 days across Australia, Canada, England, Germany, New Zealand, Spain, and the United States. We employed linear regression models to measure age- and sex-specific effects within and across countries. In addition, we analyzed hospital-centricity, that is, the days spent in hospital and site of death. Data Collection/Extraction Methods: We identified patients who sustained a hip fracture in 2016 and died within 12 months from date of admission. Principal Findings: Resource use, costs, and the proportion of deaths in hospital showed large variability being high in England and Spain, while low in New Zealand. Days in hospital significantly decreased with increasing age in Canada, Germany, Spain, and the United States. Hospital spending near date of death was significantly lower for women in Canada, Germany, and the United States. The age gradient and the sex effect were less pronounced in utilization and spending of emergency care, outpatient care, and drugs. Conclusions: Across seven countries, we find important variations in end-of-life care for patients who sustained a hip fracture, with some differences explained by sex and age. Our work sheds important insights that may help ongoing health policy discussions on equity, efficiency, and reimbursement in health care systems. KEYWORDS administrative data, age inequalities, end-of-life care, gender inequalities, health care spending, health care utilization, international comparison, What is known on this topic * Countries follow different approaches to providing end-of-life care. * Health care spending and utilization increases near death. * International studies of health systems [...]
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- 2021
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7. Differences in health care spending and utilization among older frail adults in high-income countries: ICCONIC hip fracture persona
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Papanicolas, Irene, Figueroa, Jose F., Schoenfeld, Andrew J., Riley, Kristen, Abiona, Olukorede, Arvin, Mlna, Atsma, Femke, Bernal-Delgado, Enrique, Bowden, Nicholas, Blankart, Carl Rudolf, Deeny, Sarah, Estupinan-Romero, Francisco, Gauld, Robin, Haywood, Philip, Janlov, Nils, Knight, Hannah, Lorenzoni, Luca, Marino, Alberto, Or, Zeynep, Penneau, Anne, Shatrov, Kosta, Stafford, Mai, Galien, Onno van de, Gool, Kees van, Wodchis, Walter, and Jha, Ashish K.
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Medical care -- Utilization ,Aged -- Economic aspects -- Diseases ,Medical economics -- Comparative analysis -- International aspects ,Hip joint -- Fractures ,Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective: This study explores differences in spending and utilization of health care services for an older person with frailty before and after a hip fracture. Data Sources: We used individual-level patient data from five care settings. Study Design: We compared utilization and spending of an older person aged older than 65 years for 365 days before and after a hip fracture across 11 countries and five domains of care as follows: acute hospital care, primary care, outpatient specialty care, post-acute rehabilitative care, and outpatient drugs. Utilization and spending were age and sex standardized.. Data Collection/Extraction Methods: The data were compiled by the International Collaborative on Costs, Outcomes, and Needs in Care (ICCONIC) across 11 countries as follows: Australia, Canada, England, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States. Principal Findings: The sample ranged from 1859 patients in Spain to 42,849 in France. Mean age ranged from 81.2 in Switzerland to 84.7 in Australia. The majority of patients across countries were female. Relative to other countries, the United States had the lowest inpatient length of stay (11.3), but the highest number of days were spent in post-acute care rehab (100.7) and, on average, had more visits to specialist providers (6.8 per year) than primary care providers (4.0 per year). Across almost all sectors, the United States spent more per person than other countries per unit ($13,622 per hospitalization, $233 per primary care visit, $386 per MD specialist visit). Patients also had high expenditures in the year prior to the hip fracture, mostly concentrated in the inpatient setting. Conclusion: Across 11 high-income countries, there is substantial variation in health care spending and utilization for an older person with frailty, both before and after a hip fracture. The United States is the most expensive country due to high prices and above average utilization of post-acute rehab care. KEYWORDS health systems, hip fracture, international comparisons, What is known on this topic * Health systems spend different amounts caring for patients. * Older persons with frailty are more likely to incur high levels of spending as [...]
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- 2021
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8. A methodology for identifying high-need, high-cost patient personas for international comparisons
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Figueroa, Jose F., Horneffer, Kathryn E., Riley, Kristen, Abiona, Olukorede, Arvin, Mina, Atsma, Femke, Bernal-Delgado, Enrique, Blankart, Carl Rudolf, Bowden, Nicholas, Deeny, Sarah, Estupinan-Romero, Francisco, Gauld, Robin, Hansen, Tonya Moen, Haywood, Philip, Janlov, Nils, Knight, Hannah, Lorenzoni, Luca, Marino, Alberto, Or, Zeynep, Pellet, Leila, Orlander, Duncan, Penneau, Anne, Schoenfeld, Andrew J., Shatrov, Kosta, Skudal, Kjersti Eeg, Stafford, Mai, Galien, Onno van de, Gool, Kees van, Wodchis, Walter P., Tanke, Marit, Jha, Ashish K., and Papanicolas, Irene
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Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective: To establish a methodological approach to compare two high-need, highcost (HNHC) patient personas internationally. Data sources: Linked individual-level administrative data from the inpatient and outpatient sectors compiled by the International Collaborative on Costs, Outcomes, and Needs in Care (ICCONIC) across 11 countries: Australia, Canada, England, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States. Study design: We outline a methodological approach to identify HNHC patient types for international comparisons that reflect complex, priority populations defined by the National Academy of Medicine. We define two patient profiles using accessible patient-level datasets linked across different domains of care-hospital care, primary care, outpatient specialty care, post-acute rehabilitative care, long-term care, homehealth care, and outpatient drugs. The personas include a frail older adult with a hip fracture with subsequent hip replacement and an older person with complex multimorbidity, including heart failure and diabetes. We demonstrate their comparability by examining the characteristics and clinical diagnoses captured across countries. Data collection/extraction methods: Data collected by ICCONIC partners. Principal findings: Across 11 countries, the identification of HNHC patient personas was feasible to examine variations in healthcare utilization, spending, and patient outcomes. The ability of countries to examine linked, individual-level data varied, with the Netherlands, Canada, and Germany able to comprehensively examine care across all seven domains, whereas other countries such as England, Switzerland, and New Zealand were more limited. All countries were able to identify a hip fracture persona and a heart failure persona. Patient characteristics were reassuringly similar across countries. Conclusion: Although there are cross-country differences in the availability and structure of data sources, countries had the ability to effectively identify comparable HNHC personas for international study. This work serves as the methodological paper for six accompanying papers examining differences in spending, utilization, and outcomes for these personas across countries. KEYWORDS international comparison, vignettes, What is known on this topic * International comparisons of health systems mostly rely on comparisons of the inpatient setting. * Little comparative work examines patterns of spending and utilization [...]
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- 2021
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9. International comparison of health spending and utilization among people with complex multimorbidity
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Figueroa, Jose F., Papanicolas, Irene, Riley, Kristen, Abiona, Olukorede, Arvin, Mina, Atsma, Femke, Bemal-Delgado, Enrique, Bowden, Nicholas, Blankart, Carl Rudolf, Deeny, Sarah, Estupinan-Romero, Francisco, Gauld, Robin, Haywood, Philip, Janlov, Nils, Knight, Hannah, Lorenzoni, Luca, Marino, Alberto, Or, Zeynep, Penneau, Anne, Shatrov, Kosta, Galien, Onno van de, Gool, Kees van, Wodchis, Walter, and Jha, Ashish K.
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Medical care -- Utilization ,Medical care, Cost of -- International aspects -- Comparative analysis ,Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study was to explore cross-country differences in spending and utilization across different domains of care for a multimorbid persona with heart failure and diabetes. Data Sources: We used individual-level administrative claims or registry data from inpatient and outpatient health care sectors compiled by the International Collaborative on Costs, Outcomes, and Needs in Care (ICCONIC) across 11 countries: Australia, Canada, England, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States (US). Data Collection/Extraction Methods: Data collected by ICCONIC partners. Study Design: We retrospectively analyzed age-sex standardized utilization and spending of an older person (65-90 years) hospitalized with a heart failure exacerbation and a secondary diagnosis of diabetes across five domains of care: hospital care, primary care, outpatient specialty care, post-acute rehabilitative care, and outpatient drugs. Principal Findings: Sample sizes ranged from n = 1270 in Spain to n = 21,803 in the United States. Mean age (standard deviation [SD]) ranged from 76.2 (5.6) in the Netherlands to 80.3 (6.8) in Sweden. We observed substantial variation in spending and utilization across care settings. On average, England spent $10,956 per person in hospital care while the United States spent $30,877. The United States had a shorter length of stay over the year (18.9 days) compared to France (32.9) and Germany (33.4). The United States spent more days in facility-based rehabilitative care than other countries. Australia spent $421 per person in primary care, while Spain (Aragon) spent $1557. The United States and Canada had proportionately more visits to specialist providers than primary care providers. Across almost all sectors, the United States spent more than other countries, suggesting higher prices per unit. Conclusion: Across 11 countries, there is substantial variation in health care spending and utilization for a complex multimorbid persona with heart failure and diabetes. Drivers of spending vary across countries, with the United States being the most expensive country due to high prices and higher use of facility-based rehabilitative care. KEYWORDS diabetes, health care spending, heart failure, high-cost patients, high need, international comparison, What is known on this topic * Health systems are structured and financed differently. * Patients with complex multimorbidity are more susceptible to poor quality of care and incur higher [...]
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- 2021
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10. Differences in health outcomes for high-need high-cost patients across high-income countries
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Papanicolas, Irene, Riley, Kristen, Abiona, Olukorede, Arvin, Mina, Atsma, Femke, Bemal-Delgado, Enrique, Bowden, Nicholas, Blankart, Carl Rudolf, Deeny, Sarah, Estupinan-Romero, Francisco, Gauld, Robin, Haywood, Philip, Janlov, Nils, Knight, Hannah, Lorenzoni, Luca, Marino, Alberto, Or, Zeynep, Penneau, Anne, Schoenfeld, Andrew J., Shatrov, Kosta, Stafford, Mai, Galien, Onno van de, Gool, Kees van, Wodchis, Walter, Jha, Ashish K., and Figueroa, Jose F.
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Outcome and process assessment (Health Care) -- International aspects ,Medical care -- Quality management ,Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective: This study explores variations in outcomes of care for two types of patient personas-an older frail person recovering from a hip fracture and a multimorbid older patient with congestive heart failure (CHF) and diabetes. Data Sources: We used individual-level patient data from 11 health systems. Study Design: We compared inpatient mortality, mortality, and readmission rates at 30, 90, and 365 days. For the hip fracture persona, we also calculated time to surgery. Outcomes were standardized by age and sex. Data Collection/Extraction Methods: Data was compiled by the International Collaborative on Costs, Outcomes and Needs in Care across 11 countries for the years 2016-2017 (or nearest): Australia, Canada, England, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States. Principal Findings: The hip sample across ranged from 1859 patients in Aragon, Spain, to 42,849 in France. Mean age ranged from 81.2 in Switzerland to 84.7 in Australia, and the majority of hip patients across countries were female. The congestive heart failure (CHF) sample ranged from 742 patients in England to 21,803 in the United States. Mean age ranged from 77.2 in the United States to 80.3 in Sweden, and the majority of CHF patients were males. Average in-hospital mortality across countries was 4.1%. for the hip persona and 6.3% for the CHF persona. At the year mark, the mean mortality across all countries was 25.3% for the hip persona and 32.7% for CHF persona. Across both patient types, England reported the highest mortality at 1 year followed by the United States. Readmission rates for all periods were higher for the CHF persona than the hip persona. At 30 days, the average readmission rate for the hip persona was 13.8% and 27.6% for the CHF persona. Conclusion: Across 11 countries, there are meaningful differences in health system outcomes for two types of patients. KEYWORDS health systems, mortality, readmissions, What is known on this topic * Patient outcomes such as mortality and readmissions are commonly used as measures of performance of heatlh systems. * There are few sources of [...]
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- 2021
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11. Construction of Empirical Care Pathways Process Models From Multiple Real-World Datasets
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Gonzalez-Garcia, Juan, primary, Telleria-Orriols, Carlos, additional, Estupinan-Romero, Francisco, additional, and Bernal-Delgado, Enrique, additional
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- 2020
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12. Es necesario rotular con más claridad los tubos emisores de luz ultravioleta C para la prevención de lesiones en la piel y los ojos
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Alonso Pérez de Ágreda, Juan Pablo, Guimbao Bescós, Joaquín, Estupiñán Romero, Francisco Ramón, Compés Dea, Cecilia, Aznar Brieba, Amaya, Lázaro Belanche, M.<ce:sup loc='post">a</ce:sup> Ángeles, and Alonso Esteban, Rafael
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- 2015
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