Literature DB >> 30376581

Health systems thinking: A new generation of research to improve healthcare quality.

Hannah H Leslie1, Lisa R Hirschhorn2, Tanya Marchant3, Svetlana V Doubova4, Oye Gureje5, Margaret E Kruk1.   

Abstract

Hannah Leslie and colleagues of the High-Quality Health Commission discuss in an Editorial the findings from their report that detail the improvements needed to prevent declines in individuals' health as the scope and quality of health systems increase. Patient-centered care at the population level, improved utility of research products, and innovative reporting tools to help guide the development of new methods are key to improved global healthcare.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30376581      PMCID: PMC6207294          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002682

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Med        ISSN: 1549-1277            Impact factor:   11.069


As global and national pursuit of universal health coverage (UHC) accelerates, health system quality has emerged as a critical concern, a weakness that could blunt the promise of UHC. Without adequate quality of care, access to care and financial protection will be insufficient to improve population health. Findings from the recent Lancet Global Health Commission for High Quality Health Systems suggest that increasing the scope and reach of health systems without attention to improving quality has the potential to worsen health [1]: individuals can be harmed by unsafe procedures or unnecessary treatment, communities may lose faith in health systems, and already limited resources will be misdirected. Health systems in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) today demonstrate broad and deep gaps in readiness to provide care [2-5], systematic deficiencies in diagnosis and treatment [6-8], and frequent reports of disrespectful care [9]. As of 2016, receipt of poor-quality care resulted in an estimated 5 million excess deaths in LMICs [10]. The breadth of this quality deficit—spanning long-standing global health priorities such as maternal [11] and child health [4], as well as understudied needs such as mental healthcare [12]—demands a new generation of research to compel change. Central to a productive new research agenda is the recognition of health system quality as a critical factor in progress towards UHC. Research scope and methodology must advance to match the magnitude and urgency of this challenge. Health systems are complex adaptive systems with multiple interconnected levels and overlapping sectors [13,14]. Individuals across diverse populations are active agents in choosing if, when, and where to access care [15]. Amidst these complexities, decision-makers need research that addresses national priorities and reflects the complexity and time frame for impact. Current research is inadequate to meet this need. We suggest three core characteristics for ensuring that research delivers the actionable knowledge required to achieve UHC: meaning, utility, and innovation.

Meaning: Answer questions that matter for population health

Conducting meaningful research depends upon a common language and valid measures to benchmark progress and inform action. A peril of the current global attention to health system quality is the elasticity of central concepts concerning quality care and people-centered health systems. Without shared understanding and standards among researchers and policy makers, momentum is in danger of dissipating into inconsistent assessments and mutually incomparable investments, leaving researchers without insight and policy makers without direction. Health system quality encompasses much more than inputs like staffing, equipment, and drugs. Such indicators of facility infrastructure provide limited insight on quality of care received [16]. Further, assessments at a single point in time will not capture the dynamics of system–population interactions that shape health outcomes [17]. To replace crude indicators such as childbirth in a health facility, assessment must not stop at the step of asking how many women delivered at a facility that might be capable of providing appropriate care but must fundamentally shift towards determining whether women were treated with respect, had complications identified quickly and managed appropriately, and returned home with a healthy newborn and the confidence to seek care for herself and her child in the future. Patient centeredness is a key attribute of high-quality health systems [18] but is at risk of becoming a platitude unless research can operationalize this idea within a context-specific quality framework. Patient ratings of health services are a function not just of quality of care but of individuals’ own expectations and capacity for self-advocacy, which are fundamentally patterned by inequities. Those most frequently expressing satisfaction are likely to be the most vulnerable to poor quality [1]. Judging a health system or improvement strategy based only on satisfaction risks worsening existing inequities. To capture more than low expectations, tools for efficient assessment of patient experience and trust in the health system must be validated and used to assess strategies for patient-centered care.

Utility: Align research products with user needs

The dominance of global rather than national funders for health system research and the privileging of short-term, program-specific effects over breadth and sustainability has resulted in fragmented assessments that are poorly suited to sound policy making [1,16]. Country-level action is needed to guide the next generation of research towards system-wide improvement. Strengthening quality measurement and implementing large-scale improvements demands a capacity for synthesizing complex data that goes beyond current mechanisms for collection and analysis. Countries must strengthen capacity to extract meaningful insight about system quality from diverse data sources—demographics, health information systems, finance, and patient sources, among others—to inform decisions across health system levels. Research should identify cross-cutting measures that can serve as proxies for health system quality and its impacts. Such efforts must be systems oriented, seeking evidence that accounts for unintended outcomes—positive or negative—across service areas and levels of care. For instance, provision of quality mental healthcare depends on a system capable of screening and detection, integration, and continuous care [19]. How should development of indicators, analytic tools, and data-use plans to measure quality of mental healthcare differ if the goal is to provide insight on system functioning as a whole rather than on a single condition or capacity? Given the resource and time costs of measurement, any new measures should be assessed not just on validity but based on their feasibility, intended purpose, and specific contribution to improvement at a system level. Established measures of lower utility should be phased out. Evaluations should also provide the information required to build political will for large-scale change: a focus on short-term effects at the point of care is unlikely to do so. Quality assessment that captures only inputs, that compares patient health outcomes without accounting for population risk and individual health status, or that considers patient satisfaction apart from vulnerabilities and expectations will yield little gain.

Innovation: Develop new methods to measure and evaluate

In measurement, innovation is needed in tools and methods to collect data on patient experience and outcomes, to extract insight on quality from health facilities and systems, and particularly to synthesize information for practical application. In improvement, tools are needed for broad-scale evaluation that balances feasibility against rigorous assessment of causality and transferability. Pooling insight and tools across traditional disciplinary divides and looking beyond health science to education and organizational management can accelerate progress. Solutions must consider representativeness as well as vulnerable subpopulations to ensure this progress is equitable. For health systems to contribute to improved population health, innovative approaches must change the trajectory of research to situate questions within complex systems and extract insights beyond the handful of currently studied health needs and individual clinics. To gain insight over time and across conditions and settings will require a shift towards coordinated, country-led efforts. These in turn demand coordination among researchers across disciplines and settings to extract and translate valuable ideas and greater flexibility in resource allocation from national and global funders to accommodate the complexity of research producing generalizable insights. The unprecedented attention to quality of care in 2018 [20] has amply demonstrated the magnitude of the challenge facing national governments, multilateral organizations, and researchers. The research questions and methods prioritized now will determine whether the momentum from these efforts translates over the next decade into the insights needed to build better health systems.
  18 in total

1.  Monitoring service delivery for universal health coverage: the Service Availability and Readiness Assessment.

Authors:  Kathryn O'Neill; Marina Takane; Ashley Sheffel; Carla Abou-Zahr; Ties Boerma
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2013-09-30       Impact factor: 9.408

2.  Quality and Accountability in Health Care Delivery: Audit-Study Evidence from Primary Care in India.

Authors:  Jishnu Das; Alaka Holla; Aakash Mohpal; Karthik Muralidharan
Journal:  Am Econ Rev       Date:  2016-12

3.  Active patients in rural African health care: implications for research and policy.

Authors:  Kenneth L Leonard
Journal:  Health Policy Plan       Date:  2013-01-09       Impact factor: 3.344

4.  Undertreatment of people with major depressive disorder in 21 countries.

Authors:  Graham Thornicroft; Somnath Chatterji; Sara Evans-Lacko; Michael Gruber; Nancy Sampson; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; Ali Al-Hamzawi; Jordi Alonso; Laura Andrade; Guilherme Borges; Ronny Bruffaerts; Brendan Bunting; Jose Miguel Caldas de Almeida; Silvia Florescu; Giovanni de Girolamo; Oye Gureje; Josep Maria Haro; Yanling He; Hristo Hinkov; Elie Karam; Norito Kawakami; Sing Lee; Fernando Navarro-Mateu; Marina Piazza; Jose Posada-Villa; Yolanda Torres de Galvis; Ronald C Kessler
Journal:  Br J Psychiatry       Date:  2016-12-01       Impact factor: 9.319

5.  Adding content to contacts: measurement of high quality contacts for maternal and newborn health in Ethiopia, north east Nigeria, and Uttar Pradesh, India.

Authors:  Tanya Marchant; Ritgak Dimka Tilley-Gyado; Tsegahun Tessema; Kultar Singh; Meenakshi Gautham; Nasir Umar; Della Berhanu; Simon Cousens; Joanna R M Armstrong Schellenberg
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-05-22       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Integrated paediatric fever management and antibiotic over-treatment in Malawi health facilities: data mining a national facility census.

Authors:  Emily White Johansson; Katarina Ekholm Selling; Humphreys Nsona; Bonnie Mappin; Peter W Gething; Max Petzold; Stefan Swartling Peterson; Helena Hildenwall
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2016-08-04       Impact factor: 2.979

7.  Service readiness of health facilities in Bangladesh, Haiti, Kenya, Malawi, Namibia, Nepal, Rwanda, Senegal, Uganda and the United Republic of Tanzania.

Authors:  Hannah H Leslie; Donna Spiegelman; Xin Zhou; Margaret E Kruk
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2017-09-05       Impact factor: 9.408

8.  What capacity exists to provide essential inpatient care to small and sick newborns in a high mortality urban setting? - A cross-sectional study in Nairobi City County, Kenya.

Authors:  Georgina A V Murphy; David Gathara; Nancy Abuya; Jacintah Mwachiro; Sam Ochola; Robert Ayisi; Mike English
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-04-27       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Mortality due to low-quality health systems in the universal health coverage era: a systematic analysis of amenable deaths in 137 countries.

Authors:  Margaret E Kruk; Anna D Gage; Naima T Joseph; Goodarz Danaei; Sebastián García-Saisó; Joshua A Salomon
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2018-09-05       Impact factor: 79.321

10.  Associations between increased intervention coverage for mothers and newborns and the number and quality of contacts between families and health workers: An analysis of cluster level repeat cross sectional survey data in Ethiopia.

Authors:  Elizabeth Allen; Joanna Schellenberg; Della Berhanu; Simon Cousens; Tanya Marchant
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-08-02       Impact factor: 3.240

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Review 1.  Examining perspectives on the adoption and use of computer-based patient-reported outcomes among clinicians and health professionals: a Q methodology study.

Authors:  Shirley V Burton; Annette L Valenta; Justin Starren; Joanna Abraham; Therese Nelson; Karl Kochendorfer; Ashley Hughes; Bhrandon Harris; Andrew Boyd
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2022-01-29       Impact factor: 4.497

2.  Primary health care financing interventions: a systematic review and stakeholder-driven research agenda for the Asia-Pacific region.

Authors:  Blake Angell; Rebecca Dodd; Anna Palagyi; Thomas Gadsden; Seye Abimbola; Shankar Prinja; Stephen Jan; David Peiris
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2019-08-16

3.  Estimating the global impact of poor quality of care on maternal and neonatal outcomes in 81 low- and middle-income countries: A modeling study.

Authors:  Victoria B Chou; Neff Walker; Mufaro Kanyangarara
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2019-12-18       Impact factor: 11.069

4.  Learning from changes concurrent with implementing a complex and dynamic intervention to improve urban maternal and perinatal health in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 2011-2019.

Authors:  Brenda Sequeira Dmello; Ziada Sellah; Grace Magembe; Natasha Housseine; Nanna Maaløe; Thomas van den Akker; Dan W Meyrowitsch; Timothy Mushi; Mangalu Masweko; Dorcas Jidayi; Jos van Roosmalen; Hussein L Kidanto
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2021-01

5.  Evidence-based policymaking when evidence is incomplete: The case of HIV programme integration.

Authors:  Jan A C Hontelez; Caroline A Bulstra; Anna Yakusik; Erik Lamontagne; Till W Bärnighausen; Rifat Atun
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2021-11-09       Impact factor: 11.069

6.  Stability of healthcare quality measures for maternal and child services: Analysis of the continuous service provision assessment of health facilities in Senegal, 2012-2018.

Authors:  Hannah H Leslie; Celestin Hategeka; Papa Ibrahima Ndour; Kojo Nimako; Mamadou Dieng; Abdoulaye Diallo; Youssoupha Ndiaye
Journal:  Trop Med Int Health       Date:  2021-12-16       Impact factor: 3.918

7.  Cardiovascular disease risk profile and management among people 40 years of age and above in Bo, Sierra Leone: A cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Maria Lisa Odland; Khadija Gassama; Tahir Bockarie; Haja Wurie; Rashid Ansumana; Miles D Witham; Oyinlola Oyebode; Lisa R Hirschhorn; Justine I Davies
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-09-09       Impact factor: 3.752

8.  Measuring Quality of Maternal, Neonatal, Child, Reproductive Health and Nutrition Care with tools developed by the RADAR project and tested in Sub Saharan Africa.

Authors:  Melissa A Marx; Emily Frost; Elizabeth Hazel; Diwakar Mohan
Journal:  Glob Health Action       Date:  2022-06-30       Impact factor: 2.996

9.  Examining coverage, content, and impact of maternal nutrition interventions: the case for quality-adjusted coverage measurement.

Authors:  Naima T Joseph; Ellen Piwoz; Dennis Lee; Address Malata; Hannah H Leslie
Journal:  J Glob Health       Date:  2020-06       Impact factor: 4.413

10.  Health and medical research for all: The challenge remains open.

Authors: 
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2019-10-31       Impact factor: 11.069

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