| Literature DB >> 23234463 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In rationing decisions in health, many criteria like costs, effectiveness, equity and feasibility concerns play a role. These criteria stem from different disciplines that all aim to inform health care rationing decisions, but a single underlying concept that incorporates all criteria does not yet exist. Therefore, we aim to develop a conceptual mapping of criteria, based on the World Health Organization's Health Systems Performance and Health Systems Building Blocks frameworks. This map can be an aid to decision makers to identify the relevant criteria for priority setting in their specific context.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23234463 PMCID: PMC3565954 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-12-454
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1The building blocks and goals of the health system.
Definitions of categories used in the criteria map (based on the health system goals and building blocks)
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| Health level | To improve the total average level of health in the population. |
| Health distribution | To achieve absence of avoidable or remediable differences in health among groups of people, defined socially, economically, demographically, or geographically. |
| Responsiveness | To use interventions that are responsive to people’s expectations in regard to non-health matters and reflect the importance of people’s dignity, autonomy and the confidentiality of information. |
| Social & financial risk protection | To provide financial protection against the costs of ill-health |
| Improved efficiency | To make the best and most efficient use of resources. |
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| Service delivery | Good health services are those which deliver effective, safe, quality personal and non-personal health interventions to those that need them, when and where needed, with minimum waste of resources. |
| Health workforce | A well-performing health workforce is one that works in ways that are responsive, fair and efficient to achieve the best health outcomes possible, given available resources and circumstances (i.e. there is sufficient staff, fairly distributed; they are competent, responsive and productive). |
| Information | A well-functioning health information system is one that ensures the production, analysis, dissemination and use of reliable and timely information on health determinants, health system performance and health status. |
| Medical products, vaccines & technologies | A well-functioning health system ensures equitable access to essential medical products, vaccines and technologies of assured quality, safety, efficacy and cost-effectiveness, and their scientifically sound and cost-effective use. |
| Financing | A good health financing system raises adequate funds for health, in ways that ensure people can use needed services, and are protected from financial catastrophe or impoverishment associated with having to pay for them. It provides incentives for providers and users to be efficient. |
| Leadership/governance | Leadership and governance involves ensuring strategic policy frameworks exist and are combined with effective oversight, coalition-building, regulation, attention to system-design and accountability. |
Figure 2Mapping of priority setting criteria.
Definitions of criteria for priority setting included in the criteria map
| Health level | Effectiveness on individual level | Interventions that are effective in reduction of the morbidity and mortality, as measured on individual person level, may deserve priority. | |
| Effectiveness on population level | Interventions that are effective in reduction of the morbidity and mortality, as measured on population level, may deserve priority. | ||
| Patient reported health status | Interventions that have high impact on patient reported health status may deserve priority. | ||
| Safety | Interventions that do not harm in terms of morbidity and mortality may deserve priority. | ||
| Health distribution | Various criteria | All criteria proposed in the map have the same underlying rationale: all people should have as much of a fair chance to live a healthy life, and therefore interventions focusing on certain social groups may deserve priority. | |
| Responsiveness | Patient perceived quality of care | Interventions that are responsive according to patient’s expectations of quality of care may deserve priority. | |
| Burden of disease | Interventions that focus on a high burden of disease in society may deserve priority. | ||
| Social & financial risk protection | Catastrophic health expenditure | Health care related costs can push people into poverty. Interventions that protect people against catastrophic health expenditure may deserve priority. | |
| Economic productivity & care for others | People who are economically productive and/or take care of others and become ill face income loss and health related costs, which could lead to poverty. Interventions that target those people may deserve priority. | ||
| Rare diseases | Interventions for rare diseases might be very costly (because of the small number patients) and could push people into poverty. Therefore, these interventions may deserve priority. | ||
| Improved efficiency | Size of target population | Interventions that show economies of scale because they target a high number of people may deserve priority. | |
| Feasibility | Service delivery | Service requirements | Interventions that are easy to implement because of the current service capacity may have priority. E.g. availability of: service infrastructure, delivery models, safety and quality and management. |
| Health workforce | Health workforce requirements | Interventions that are easy to implement because of the current health workforce capacity may have priority. E.g. availability workforce and workforce policies, preferences of workforce for working conditions. | |
| Information | Information requirements | Interventions that are easy to implement because of the current information system capacity may have priority. E.g. availability of surveillance systems. | |
| Medical products, vaccines & technology | Medical products, vaccines & technology requirements | Interventions that are easy to implement because of the current medical products, vaccines & technology capacity may have priority. E.g. norms, standards and reliability procurement. | |
| Financing | Unit costs | Interventions that have small unit cost per patient may have priority. | |
| Budget impact | Interventions that consume a small part of the budget may have priority. | ||
| Financing party | Interventions that receive sustainable financing may have priority. | ||
| Leadership/governance | Congruency previous priority setting | Interventions that are in line with previous spending pattern may have priority. | |
| Cultural acceptability | Interventions that are cultural acceptable, because of the norms and values, may have priority. | ||
| Political acceptability | Interventions that are political acceptable may have priority. | ||
| Stakeholder acceptability | Interventions that are accepted by important stakeholder groups (e.g. patients groups, taxpayers, health care providers, donor agencies, voters) may have priority. | ||
| Legal barriers | Interventions that face no legal barriers may have priority. | ||