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Pay for performance and impact evaluation design Practical lessons from OECD review

Pay for performance and impact evaluation design Practical lessons from OECD review Y-Ling Chi, OECD. Methods available. Quantitative methods Experimental methods Golden standard Non-experimental methodology Quasi experimental methods Qualitative methods.

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Pay for performance and impact evaluation design Practical lessons from OECD review

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  1. Pay for performance and impact evaluation design Practicallessonsfrom OECD review Y-Ling Chi, OECD

  2. Methods available • Quantitative methods • Experimental methods Golden standard • Non-experimental methodology • Quasi experimental methods • Qualitative methods

  3. Non-experimental/Quasi experimental • Quasi-experimental: Interrupted times series, regression discontinuity and score matching • Non experimental: before/after intervention or treatment/control afterwards

  4. Experimental methods = Randomized Control Trials (RCTs) • Easy to understand • InternalValidity • ExternalValidity BUT • Timeline (very long) • Strong civil society (hard to comply) • Hard to implement (need to have experts) • Expensive

  5. Treatment Treatment INTERVENTION GROUP control control t -0 intervention t +1 Evaluation: difference between control and treatment // difference in t-0 and t+1

  6. How to understand Impact Evaluation? • Design a proper impact model • Translate impact model into quantifiable indicators • Think about the design model • Timing has to articulate within the implementation process • Plan resources ahead (staff, implementation, analysis etc.) • Once you finish, need good qualitative evaluation

  7. Review from OECD countries • OECD countries don’t do well in terms of evaluation US Premier Hospitalschemeexample shows thatevaluationis not central once the prorgam has been implemented. QOF shows thatdespite the yearlycost -1 billion pounds-, investment for evaluationis marginal but not evenwellperformed.

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