| Advanced Search | Web Search |
Knowledge SectionsE-magazinesThe CI PartnersClassifiedsAbout Us |
Average Rating: 4 out of 5 (2 ratings submitted)
Selecting Indicators for the Quality of Health Promotion, Prevention and Primary CareAuthorby Martin Marshall, Sheila Leatherman, Soeren Mattke and the Members of the OECD Health Promotion, Prevention and Primary Care P
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) October 28 2004 SummaryThis 50-page report presents the consensus recommendations of OECD's Health Promotion, Prevention and Primary Care Panel. The report describes the review process and provides a detailed discussion of the scientific soundness and policy importance of the indicators that were selected. Some context may be helpful in understanding the motivation for the Panel's work: "To improve care for their citizens and to realise...potential efficiency gains, policymakers are looking for methods to measure and benchmark the performance of their health care systems as a precondition for evidence-based health policy reforms. As published international health data sets such as OECD Health Data currently lack comparable measures for the technical quality of national health systems, there is, so far, little possibility of such international benchmarking. To fill this gap, the OECD Health Care Quality Indicators Project (HCQI) has brought together 21 countries, the World Health Organization (WHO), the European Commission (EC), the World Bank, and leading research organisations, such as the International Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua) and the European Society for Quality in Healthcare (ESQH)." The expert group representing these countries and organisations undertook a process of selection for quality indicators. This Panel sought to identify indicators to capture the core components of care in each of the sectors (e.g., preventive services like vaccination), regardless of the institutional setting in which those components are provided (e.g., by dedicated government agencies in one country, by general practitioners in private practice in a second, and by health plans in a third). Having made this conceptual choice, and following the recommendations for indicator evaluation developed by the US Institutes of Medicine, the Panel decided that an indicator had to: I. capture an important performance aspect:
II. be scientifically sound:
III. be feasible:
The 27 indicators selected are:
Gonorrhoea/Chlamydia rates Preventive Care - i.e., organised, population-directed services
Diagnosis and Treatment: Primary Care - i.e., diagnostic and therapeutic activities that constitute the first line of organised personal medical care
The report stresses that "the operational feasibility of the proposed indicators will now have to be assessed by a survey of data availability in OECD countries....In addition, further development of indicators, beyond the gaps indicated above, should be considered....the Panel is aware that other functions of health care systems, such as hospice care and social care, overlap and interact with primary care, yet are not covered by the present set. Finally, the focus has been on the potential contributions of physicians to quality and other professionals such as dentists and allied health professionals have not been specifically addressed." ContactOECD
Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs SourcePosting to the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO)/World Health Organization (WHO)'s Equity, Health & Human Development list server dated November 9 2004 (click here to access the archives). Placed on the Communication Initiative site January 12 2005 Last Updated January 12 2005 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below): |
Special Focus |