| Literature DB >> 28476155 |
Claire Harris1,2, Henry Ko3,4, Cara Waller3, Pamela Sloss5, Pamela Williams5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This is the fourth in a series of papers reporting a program of Sustainability in Health care by Allocating Resources Effectively (SHARE) in a local healthcare setting. Healthcare decision-makers have sought to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of services through removal or restriction of practices that are unsafe or of little benefit, often referred to as 'disinvestment'. A systematic, integrated, evidence-based program for disinvestment was being established within a large Australian health service network. Consumer engagement was acknowledged as integral to this process. This paper reports the process of developing a model to integrate consumer views and preferences into an organisation-wide approach to resource allocation.Entities:
Keywords: Community; Consumer; De-adopt; Decision-making; Decommission; Disinvestment; Engagement; Health technology; Resource allocation; TCP
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28476155 PMCID: PMC5420096 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2212-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Overview of SHARE Program
Fig. 2Conceptual framework of relationships between components of organisational infrastructure for resource allocation (from Harris et al [13] with permission)
Structure and practice elements of components of organisational infrastructure for resource allocation (from Harris et al [13] with permission)
| Components | Structure (Who, What) | Practice (How) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Governance | ▪ Overseers | ▪ Oversight |
| 2. Administration | ▪ Administrators | ▪ Methods of administration, coordination, communication and collaboration |
| 3. Stakeholder engagement | ▪ Clinicians, Managers, Consumers, Technical experts, Funders, other relevant parties | ▪ Methods of identification, recruitment and engagement |
| 4. Resources | ▪ Funding sources | ▪ Provision of appropriate and adequate funding, time, skills/training, information |
| 5. Decision-making | ▪ Decision-makers | ▪ Methods of decision-making |
| 6. Implementation | ▪ Purchasers | ▪ Methods of purchasing |
| ▪ Policy and guidance developers | ▪ Methods of policy and guidance development | |
| ▪ Implementers | ▪ Methods of project management | |
| 7. Evaluation | ▪ Evaluators | ▪ Methods of evaluation |
| 8. (Reinvestment) | Requirements for reinvestment/reallocation | Methods of reinvestment/reallocation |
aRequirement is used in the sense of performance stipulated in accordance with policies, regulations, standards or similar rules/obligations
Fig. 3Conceptual framework of potential settings and methods for disinvestment decisions in health service systems and processes (from Harris et al [12] with permission)
Fig. 4Conceptual framework of SHARE program (from Harris et al [15] with permission)
Fig. 5Model for integrating consumer values and preferences into the resource allocation process in a local healthcare setting
Definitions
| Health consumers | Patients, potential patients, current and previous users of health services; parents, guardians or carers of patients; organisations representing consumers’ interests; members of the public who are targets of health promotion programs (adapted from ACSQHC [ |
| Consumer representatives | Members of a committee, steering group, working party, panel or similar decision-making group who voices the consumer perspective and takes part in the process on behalf of consumers (adapted from CHF [ |
| Community | Group of people sharing a common interest including cultural, social, political, health and economic interests and/or a geographic association (adapted from CHF [ |
| Consumer engagement | Inclusion of consumers and/or community members in a continuum of activities from passive behaviours such as receiving information, through more active participation, to shared decision-making with equal power. These activities include, but are not limited to, provision of information, consultation, development, participation, collaboration and empowerment (adapted from Sarrami-Foroushani et al [ |
| Communication | Consumers and/or community members are engaged through imparting or exchanging information. Information can be verbal, written or provided by other methods. Communication can go both ways between consumers and/or community members and health service staff |
| Consultation | Consumers and/or community members are engaged through requests to provide their views, preferences, comments and suggestions to inform the decision-making process, but the consumers and/or community members may not be engaged in subsequent decision-making or action (adapted from PICS [ |
| Participation | Consumers and/or community members are engaged through meaningful involvement in decision-making processes for health policy and planning, healthcare management and service delivery, care and treatment, and the wellbeing of themselves and the community (adapted from Victorian Department of Human Services [ |
| Consumer evidence | Consumer opinions, perspectives and preferences found in publications and data sources |
| Routine decisions | Decisions made on a recurring basis or scheduled via a timetable eg annual budget setting processes, six-monthly practice audits, monthly Therapeutics Committee meetings, reviews of protocols at specified intervals after their introduction, etc [ |
| Reactive decisions | Decisions made in response to situations as they arise eg new legislation, product alerts and recalls, applications for new drugs to be included in the formulary, critical incidents, emerging problems, etc [ |
| Proactive decisions | Decisions driven by information that was actively sought for this purpose eg accessing newly published synthesised research evidence such as Cochrane reviews to compare against current practice, interrogating routinely-collected datasets to ascertain practices with high costs or high rates of adverse events, etc [ |
ACSQHC Australian Council on Safety and Quality in Health Care, CHF Consumer Health Forum, PICS Paediatric Integrated Cancer Service
Examples of consumer-related activities generating proactive decisions to drive change
| Research | Regularly scanning published research evidence such as reviews by the Cochrane Consumer and Communication Group or publications from relevant consumer agencies for applicability to the local context and comparing the findings with current practice to determine whether there is a need for change |
| Data | Actively exploring local sources of routinely-collected data such as complaints registers or patient satisfaction surveys for trends or emerging themes that identify opportunities for improvement |
| Engagement | (Communication) Establishing mechanisms to encourage, accept and act upon consumer-initiated feedback |
| (Consultation) Seeking regular consumer feedback to initiate change in targeted areas, for example: |
Examples of publications with consumer information
| Consumer health journals |
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| Consumer health organisation newsletters |
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| Cochrane Consumers And Communication Review Group |
| The Cochrane Consumers and Communication Review Group is part of the international Cochrane Collaboration. The Group coordinates the preparation and publication of systematic reviews of interventions which affect the way people interact with healthcare professionals, services and researchers. These reviews are published in The Cochrane Library. |
| Quality of Care Reports |
| All Victorian health services are required to publish an annual Quality of Care Report each financial year. The primary audience includes consumers, carers and the health service community. Health services should consult with consumers, carers and community members and/or their Community Advisory Committee about the specific content. Minimum requirements include: |
| Other |
| Consumer driven healthcare is designed to help health care organizations respond effectively to the shift in market power, become consumer-centric, and position themselves to become market leaders in the new consumer-driven market. |
Examples of routinely-collected consumer data
| Satisfaction surveys |
| The Victorian Patient Satisfaction Monitor (VPSM) is a state-wide survey that selects respondents at random; users are sent a unique ID to complete the survey by invitation only. |
| The Victorian Healthcare Experience Survey (VHES) is a state-wide survey that allows a wide range of people to provide feedback on their experiences and features specialised questionnaires for adult and child inpatients and emergency department attendees, including parents/guardians, and maternity clients. Surveys are distributed in the month following the admission or attendance. People may respond either online or on paper with a freepost return. Surveys are available in English and a range of community languages. |
| Complaints, Compliments, Comments |
| Monash Health |
| The Office of the Health Services Commissioner (OHSC) |
| Other |
| Individual health services and state health departments conduct service reviews, audits and other studies that include patient and consumer information |
Features of a model for consumer engagement in organisation-wide decision-making for resource allocation in a local health service
| Domain | SHARE features |
|---|---|
| Purpose | The model is primarily descriptive to enable replication and testing. There are also some explanatory elements addressed in the relationships between components, for example all elements sit within the context of an organisation-wide program; integration of consumer views and preferences is relevant in all of the other components (governance, administration, resources, decision-making, implementation, evaluation and reinvestment). |
| Development | Methods used in development were both deductive and inductive. Evidence from the research literature and consultation with health service staff, consumers and community members was used. |
| Theoretical underpinning | No specific theory was used to underpin the model. |
| Conceptual clarity | The model overlays the three categories of consumer engagement, Communication, Consultation and Participation, onto the components of organisational infrastructure for resource allocation. The relationships between them are captured in the diagram. Details are provided in the text and in tables. |
| Level | The model was developed for organisation-wide implementation in a local health service network for resource allocation decisions. This approach could also be used at a higher (regional, state/provincial, national) or lower (single facility, department or unit) level. It is not designed for application in individual clinical decisions. |
| Situation | The model represents actual settings and contexts in health service decision-making and implementation of change. However it could also be used for teaching or capacity building through hypothetical classroom discussions or simulation exercises. |
| Users | The model can be used by any decision-makers within the health system. While use of the model could be initiated by any group, engagement and involvement of all relevant stakeholders is an underlying principle of application. The model could be used in policy, management, clinical or research contexts. |
| Function | The main function is to assist establishment of a consumer engagement program by representing a systematic approach to integration of consumer views and perspectives in organisation-wide decision-making infrastructure and identifying opportunities and methods for consumer engagement in resource allocation decisions. |
| Testable | The model describes the components of organisational infrastructure for resource allocation and settings and opportunities for consumer engagement in this context. A range of hypotheses could be developed for each of these elements and the relationships between them which could be tested in a number of ways using various methodologies. |