Gijs Steinmann1, K Daniels2,3, Fabio Mieris2, Diana Delnoij4,5, Hester van de Bovenkamp4, Paul van der Nat2,3. 1. Erasmus School of Health Policy and Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, PO Box 1738, Rotterdam, 3000 DR, The Netherlands. steinmann@eshpm.eur.nl. 2. Department of Value-Based Healthcare, St. Antonius Hospital, Nieuwegein, Utrecht, The Netherlands. 3. Scientific Center for Quality of Healthcare (IQ Healthcare), Radboud Institute for Health Sciences, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. 4. Erasmus School of Health Policy and Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, PO Box 1738, Rotterdam, 3000 DR, The Netherlands. 5. National Health Care Institute (Zorginstituut Nederland), Diemen, the Netherlands.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A crucial component of value-based health care concerns the redesign of organizational structures. In theory, hospital structures should follow value creation: addressing medical conditions for specific groups of patients over full cycles of care. In practice, however, it remains unclear how hospitals can reorganize themselves into value-based structures. The purpose of this study is to explore the ways in which Dutch hospitals are currently implementing and pursuing value-based redesign. METHODS: This qualitative exploratory study used semi-structured interviews and a focus group for data collection. Transcripts were analyzed through deductive coding, for which we used Mintzberg's theory on organizational structures, particularly his work on design parameters. RESULTS: In their efforts to create more value-based structures, Dutch hospitals often employ a variety of liaison devices, such as project teams and committees. By contrast, the actual formation of units around medical conditions is much rarer. Outcome data are widely used within planning and control systems, and some hospitals partake in external benchmarking. Not all hospitals use cost indicators for monitoring performance. CONCLUSIONS: Value-based redesign is not necessarily a matter of radical changes or binary choices. Instead, as Dutch hospitals show, it can be an incremental process, with a variety of potential knobs to turn to various degrees. Health care executives, managers, and professionals thus have a wide range of options when they aim for more value-based structures. Our conceptualization of "value-based design parameters" can help guide the selection and implementation of strategies and mechanisms for further coordination around medical conditions over full cycles of care.
BACKGROUND: A crucial component of value-based health care concerns the redesign of organizational structures. In theory, hospital structures should follow value creation: addressing medical conditions for specific groups of patients over full cycles of care. In practice, however, it remains unclear how hospitals can reorganize themselves into value-based structures. The purpose of this study is to explore the ways in which Dutch hospitals are currently implementing and pursuing value-based redesign. METHODS: This qualitative exploratory study used semi-structured interviews and a focus group for data collection. Transcripts were analyzed through deductive coding, for which we used Mintzberg's theory on organizational structures, particularly his work on design parameters. RESULTS: In their efforts to create more value-based structures, Dutch hospitals often employ a variety of liaison devices, such as project teams and committees. By contrast, the actual formation of units around medical conditions is much rarer. Outcome data are widely used within planning and control systems, and some hospitals partake in external benchmarking. Not all hospitals use cost indicators for monitoring performance. CONCLUSIONS: Value-based redesign is not necessarily a matter of radical changes or binary choices. Instead, as Dutch hospitals show, it can be an incremental process, with a variety of potential knobs to turn to various degrees. Health care executives, managers, and professionals thus have a wide range of options when they aim for more value-based structures. Our conceptualization of "value-based design parameters" can help guide the selection and implementation of strategies and mechanisms for further coordination around medical conditions over full cycles of care.
Authors: Mitchell N Sarkies; Emilie Francis-Auton; Janet C Long; Andrew Partington; Chiara Pomare; Hoa Mi Nguyen; Wendy Wu; Johanna Westbrook; Richard O Day; Jean-Frederic Levesque; Rebecca Mitchell; Frances Rapport; Henry Cutler; Yvonne Tran; Robyn Clay-Williams; Diane E Watson; Gaston Arnolda; Peter D Hibbert; Reidar Lystad; Virginia Mumford; George Leipnik; Kim Sutherland; Rebecca Hardwick; Jeffrey Braithwaite Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2020-12-22 Impact factor: 2.692
Authors: Kirsten Daniels; Marc B V Rouppe van der Voort; Douwe H Biesma; Paul B van der Nat Journal: BMC Health Serv Res Date: 2022-10-20 Impact factor: 2.908