| Literature DB >> 24604831 |
Edwine W Barasa1, Sassy Molyneux2, Mike English2, Susan Cleary3.
Abstract
Priority setting research has focused on the macro (national) and micro (bedside) level, leaving the meso (institutional, hospital) level relatively neglected. This is surprising given the key role that hospitals play in the delivery of healthcare services and the large proportion of health systems resources that they absorb. To explore the factors that impact upon priority setting at the hospital level, we conducted a thematic review of empirical studies. A systematic search of PubMed, EBSCOHOST, Econlit databases and Google scholar was supplemented by a search of key websites and a manual search of relevant papers' reference lists. A total of 24 papers were identified from developed and developing countries. We applied a policy analysis framework to examine and synthesize the findings of the selected papers. Findings suggest that priority setting practice in hospitals was influenced by (1) contextual factors such as decision space, resource availability, financing arrangements, availability and use of information, organizational culture and leadership, (2) priority setting processes that depend on the type of priority setting activity, (3) content factors such as priority setting criteria and (4) actors, their interests and power relations. We observe that there is need for studies to examine these issues and the interplay between them in greater depth and propose a conceptual framework that might be useful in examining priority setting practices in hospitals. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineEntities:
Keywords: Priority setting; healthcare planning; healthcare rationing; hospitals
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24604831 PMCID: PMC4353893 DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czu010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Policy Plan ISSN: 0268-1080 Impact factor: 3.344
General characteristics of the 24 included empirical hospital priority-setting studies
| Study | Country | Study design | Study setting | Priority setting activity | Study objectives |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | Qualitative cross-sectional study | Forty-six hospital in Ontario, Canada | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas | To describe the role of leadership in health services priority setting from the perspective of hospital leaders, and provide a set of lessons for effective priority setting practices in healthcare facilities. | |
| Canada | Qualitative case study | A tertiary-care teaching hospital with 612 acute-care beds, 543 long-term care beds, 74 nursery beds and 22 rehabilitation beds | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas—hospital strategic planning process | To examine power differences associated with institutional roles in the context of management decision making about organizational priorities. | |
| Australia | Qualitative case study | A tertiary referral hospital with about 900 beds | Health technology acquisition—medicines formulary management | To report experiences and initial responses from the hospital staff to a method to assign ranking priorities by means of a formal scoring system used for previously unfunded initiatives to allow their serial and orderly introduction into the hospital formulary. | |
| Denmark | Mixed methods case study | A hospital in Denmark | Health technology acquisition | To develop a model for resource allocation based on patient flow and to test this model on the allocation of hospital resources. | |
| France | Interventional case study | A hospital in France | Health technology acquisition | To describe the testing of a tool to help decision makers establish priorities among medical projects by scoring and ranking projects. | |
| Canada | Qualitative case study | A network of three teaching hospitals in Toronto, Canada | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas—clinical activity target setting process | To describe priority setting in a hospital and evaluate it using ‘accountability for reasonableness’, with particular attention to the appeal process. | |
| Canada | Qualitative case study | A tertiary-care teaching hospital with 612 acute-care beds, 543 long-term care beds, 74 nursery beds and 22 rehabilitation beds | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas—hospital strategic planning process | To describe priority setting in the context of a hospital strategic planning initiative and to evaluate using ‘accountability for reasonableness’. | |
| Canada | Qualitative case study | A network of three teaching hospitals in Toronto, Canada | Health technology acquisition—medicines formulary management | To describe priority setting for new drugs in a hospital and to evaluate this process using ‘accountability for reasonableness’. | |
| USA | Quantitative survey | Nineteen hospitals in the USA | Health technology acquisition | To describe the structure and processes used by Veterans Health Administration (VHA) west coast hospitals to perform new technology assessments. | |
| Canada | Qualitative case study | A large tertiary hospital in Toronto, Canada | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas—priority setting during a disease outbreak Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) | To describe and evaluate priority setting in a hospital in response to SARS. | |
| Canada | Quantitative survey | Forty-six hospital in Ontario, Canada | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas | To elicit hospital decision makers’ self-report of the fairness of priority setting in their hospitals using ‘accountability for reasonableness’. | |
| Israel | Quantitative survey | Twenty-six acute care hospitals in Israel | Health technology acquisition | To explore the decision-making process in adopting new technologies at the hospital level. | |
| Uganda | Qualitative case study | A referral hospital with 1500 patient beds | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas | To describe priority setting in a Ugandan hospital and to evaluate the description using the ethical framework, AFR. | |
| Canada | Qualitative case study | A community hospital with 425 patient beds | Health technology acquisition—adoption of advanced laparoscopic surgery | To describe the current decision-making processes for the adoption of advanced laparoscopic surgery at a community hospital in Toronto, Canada and to analyse the decision-making process using the ethical framework AFR. | |
| Denmark | Quantitative survey | Thirty-three hospitals in Denmark | Health technology acquisition | To evaluate local decision support tools used in the Danish hospital sector from a theoretical and an empirical point of view. | |
| Uganda, Canada, Norway | Qualitative case study | Three hospitals, one in Uganda, one in Canada and the other in Norway | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas | To describe the process of healthcare priority setting in Ontario, Canada, Norway and Uganda at the macro, meso and micro levels and to evaluate the description using AFR and to identify lessons of good practice. | |
| Canada | Qualitative case study | An urban university academic health sciences centre with ∼500 patient beds | Health technology acquisition—endovascular aneurysm repair | To describe and evaluate the decision-making process for the adoption of a new technology for repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms-endovascular aneurysm repair. | |
| Australia | Qualitative case study | A 300-bed university-affiliated, tertiary acute care hospital | Health technology acquisition—medicines formulary management | To describe the operations of the first reported High Cost Drug Sub-Committee in a public hospital in Australia and to evaluate the decision-making process using the ethical framework of AFR. | |
| USA | Quantitative survey | Twenty-seven hospitals in the USA | Health technology acquisition | To assess the structure, processes and cultural support behind hospital committees for new technology planning and approval. | |
| Argentina | Qualitative case study | An acute care tertiary level hospital with 350 beds | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas | To describe priority setting in an acute care municipal level public hospital in Buenos Aires and to evaluate the priority setting process using an ethical framework for fair processes. | |
| Chile | Qualitative case study | A 600 bed referral and teaching hospital in Chile | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas—resource allocation do departments and services in the hospital | To describe, using qualitative case study methods, and evaluate, using the ethical framework ‘accountability for reasonableness’, priority setting in a hospital in Chile. | |
| USA | Qualitative case study | Four hospitals in the USA | Health technology acquisition | To describe two evidence reports from the hospital-based Health Technology Assessment (HTA) centre which required the integration of local data. | |
| South Africa | Quantitative survey | Twenty-one hospital managers in South Africa, number of hospitals not specified | Health technology acquisition | To adapt and use the Danish Center for Health Technology Assessment (DACEHTA) mini-HTA tool to assess past decisions made by South African hospital managers, as applied to selected medical devices. | |
| Australia | Qualitative case study | A division of women's and children’s hospital in Adelaide, Australia | Allocation of hospital resources (and budgets) between departments and service areas—reallocate hospital resources to maximize health outcomes by developing a new hospital service profile | To describe priority setting and resource allocation undertaken by a division of the women’s and children’s hospital, in Adelaide. |
Figure 1Hospital priority setting processes.
Figure 2Framework for examining priority setting practice in hospitals.