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Back to Basics, 2013 POPULATION HEALTH : Health Care Organization

Back to Basics, 2013 POPULATION HEALTH : Health Care Organization. Prepared by Doug Coyle Epidemiology & Community Medicine. MCC Objectives: Population health 78-4 Administration of effective health programs at the population level. Rationale:

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Back to Basics, 2013 POPULATION HEALTH : Health Care Organization

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  1. Back to Basics, 2013POPULATION HEALTH :Health Care Organization Prepared by Doug Coyle Epidemiology & Community Medicine

  2. MCC Objectives: Population health 78-4 Administration of effective health programs at the population level Rationale: • Knowing the organization of the health care and public health systems in Canada as well as how to determine the most cost-effective interventions are becoming key elements of clinical practice. • Physicians also must work well in multidisciplinary teams within the current system in order to achieve the maximum health benefit for all patients and residents.

  3. MCC Objectives: Population health 78-4 Administration of effective health programs at the population level Terminal objectives: • Know and understand the pertinent history, structure and operations of the Canadian health care system. • Be familiar with economic evaluations such as cost-benefit / cost effectiveness analyses as well as issues involved with resource allocation. • Describe the approaches to assessing quality of care and methods of quality improvement.

  4. MCC Objectives: Population health 78-4 Administration of effective health programs at the population level Enabling objectives (1) • Describe at a basic level: • methods of regulation of the health professions and health care institutions; • supply, distribution and projections of health human resources; • health resource allocation; • organization of the Public Health system; and • the role of complementary delivery systems such as voluntary organizations and community health centres. • Describe the role of regulated and non-regulated health care providers and demonstrate how to work effectively with them.

  5. MCC Objectives: Population health 78-4 Administration of effective health programs at the population level Enabling objectives (2) • Outline the principles of and approaches to cost containment and economic evaluation. • Describe the main functions of public health related to population health assessment, health surveillance, disease and injury prevention, health promotion and health protection. • Demonstrate an understanding of ethical issues involved in resource allocation. • Define the concepts of efficacy, effectiveness, efficiency, coverage and compliance and discuss their relationship to the overall effectiveness of a population health program.

  6. MCC Objectives: Population health 78-4 Administration of effective health programs at the population level Enabling objectives (3) • Be able to recognize the need to adjust programs in order to meet the needs of special populations such as new immigrants or persons at increased risk. • Participate effectively in and with health organizations, ranging from individual clinical practices to provincial organizations, exerting a positive influence on clinical practice and policy-making. • Define quality improvement and related terms: quality assurance, quality control, continuous quality improvement, quality management, total quality management; audit. • Describe and understand the multiple dimensions of quality in health care, i.e. what can and should be improved.

  7. What Will We Cover? • Organization of Health Care Delivery in Canada • Elements of Health Economics

  8. Historical Progression in the Organization of Health Care

  9. Canada Health Act Principles

  10. Problems with the Canada Health Act • Only partial coverage • Physician services in and out of hospital only • What is “medically necessary” • Only those “provided by hospitals” • Not all hospitals must provide all services • Does not legislate which services must be provided • Only that federal government will not provide funding if conditions not met • Impact of other legislation • Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom

  11. Events Post 1984 • 2001: Kirby & Romanow commissions • Attempts to reform the health care system • Focus on long term sustainability • 2005: Chaoulli decision (Quebec) • Controversial interpretation of the CHA in regards to banning of private clinics. • 2012 Drummond report (Ontario) • Emphasis on home care

  12. Ways of organizing a health care system • Publicly financed and provided • UK (?), Scandinavia • Insurance based system for all • Tax based - Canada • Compulsory premiums - Japan • Insurance based system for some • (former ?) US • Wouldn’t meet requirements of Canada Health Act • Purely private • Mainly underdeveloped countries • Wouldn’t meet requirements of Canada Health Act

  13. Some Data • 2012 • total health care expenditures were $5,811/person or about $200.5 billion • 11.6% of GDP • down from 2010 (SIM web link) • 70.3% from public sector • 45% in the USA • 48% spent on hospitals, 9% on drugs, 18% on MDs • Research shows that private-for-profit care is more expensive (and potentially less effective)

  14. World Health Report, 2012 (data mostly from 2009)

  15. Methods of paying doctors (SIM web link) • Fee-for-service: unit is services. • Incentive to provide many services, especially procedures. • Capitation: unit is patient. Fixed payment per patient. • Incentive to keep people healthy, but not to make yourself accessible. • Incentive to recruit young, healthy people, not the ‘sick’ • Salary: unit is time. • Productivity depends on professionalism and institutional controls • Practice plans • Combinations of above, e.g., "blended funding“ • Family health networks (Ontario)

  16. Methods for paying hospitals • Line-by-line: • separate payments for staff, supplies, etc. • Cumbersome, rigid. • Global budget: • fixed payment to be used as hospital sees fit. • Fails to recognize differences in case mix. • Case-Mix weighted: • payment for total cost of episode, greater for more complicated cases. • Now used in Canada. • New technology: OHTAC reviews requests. • If approved, government pays. • If declined, hospitals can pay for it from core budget.

  17. ORGANIZATIONS

  18. CMPA • “The role of the CMPA as a medical defence association representing the interests of individual physicians.” • Canadian Medical Protective Association is a co-operative • largely replaced commercial malpractice insurance. • It advises physicians on threatened litigation (talk to them early), and pays legal fees and court settlements. • Fees vary by region and specialty • $792-$39,828/year.

  19. Local Health Integration Networks (LHINs) • Champlain LHIN • Covers Renfrew, Lanark, Ottawa, Eastern Ontario • Funds • 21 hospitals • 7 community health centres, • 61 long-term care homes, • the Champlain Community Care Access Centre, • and more than 100 Community Support Services including mental health and addictions agencies • Covers approximately 1.1 million people or 9 per cent the population of Ontario • Plan, coordinate, integrate and partially manage care in the target region

  20. Physician Organizations (1) • Medical Council of Canada • Maintains the Canadian Medical Registry • Does not grant licence to practice medicine • administers country-wide examinations of competency • serve as the base for provincial registration and licencing • College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario • Responsible for issuing license to practice medicine • Handles public complaints, professional discipline, etc. • Does not engage in lobbying on matters such as salaries, working conditions.

  21. Physician Organizations (1a) • Ontario license requirements • graduate of an accredited medical school • or ‘acceptable unaccredited’ school • meets standards of moral behaviour • mentally competent • integrity, honesty and decency as applied to practice • sufficient skill, knowledge and judgement • communicates effectively and professionally • Successful completion of MCCQE part 1 & 2 • Certification by either • the Royal College of Physicians & surgeons of Canada • College of Family Physicians of Canada • One year post grad training or clinical clerkship in Canada • Canadian citizen or landed immigrant

  22. Physician Organizations (2) • Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. • Maintains standards for post-graduate training through-out Canada. • Sets exams and issues fellowships for specialty training • Ontario Medical Association • Professional association; lobbies on behalf of physicians re: fees, working conditions, etc. • College of Family Physicians of Canada • Organization certifying/promoting family practice

  23. Public Health Units/Medical Officer of Health • Reports to municipal government. • Responsible for: • Food/lodging sanitation • Infectious disease control and immunization • Health promotion, etc. • Family health programmes • E.g. family planning, pre-natal and pre-school care, tobacco prevention, nutrition • Occupational and environmental health surveillance.

  24. Public Health Units/Medical Officer of Health (2) • Powers (related to a public health hazard) include: • ordering people to take any of these actions: • Vacate home or close business • Regulate or prohibit sale, manufacture, etc. of any item • Isolate people with communicable disease • Require people to be treated by MD • Require people to give blood samples

  25. Coroner • Notify coroner of deaths in the following cases: • Due to violence, negligence, misconduct, etc. • During work at a construction or mining site. • During pregnancy • Sudden/unexpected • Due to disease not treated by qualified MD • Any cause other than disease • Under suspicious circumstance or by ‘unfair means’ • Deaths in jails, foster homes, nursing homes, etc.

  26. DECISION MAKING

  27. Role of Federal Government • General responsibility for international health, public health, aboriginal health, etc. • Funding • has the greatest taxing power • Its provision of funding allows it to enforce the Canada Health Act, despite its lack of constitutional authority... • Reductions in federal contributions have reduced its influence

  28. Role of Provincial Governments • Responsibility for health (and most other expensive services) lies with the provinces • Provinces provide most of the funding for health services • Therefore, they are the main decision-makers • hospitals, • public health, etc.

  29. Decision Making in Ontario (1) • Province decides • Which drugs funded through ODB • Block budgets to LHINs • Special payments for technologies • Physician fees • Other services covered

  30. Decision Making in Ontario (2) • Drugs • Ontario covers prescriptions for approx 20% of population • Welfare recipients • Over 65 • Decision on what drugs to fund influenced by Committee to Evaluate Drugs • Based on level of evidence • Cost effectiveness

  31. Major Decision Making Committees (Ontario) • Ontario Health Technology Advisory Committee • Health technology funding to hospitals etc. • Committee to Evaluate Drugs (CED)/ Canadian Expert Drug Advisory Committee • Drug funding through OPDP • CED/ panCanadian Oncology Drug Review • Cancer drug funding

  32. Decision Making in Ontario (3) • Role of LHINs • 14 in number • regional offices of Ministry of Health & Long-term Care • Plan, coordinate, integrate and partially manage care at the local level • oversee approximately $20.3 billion health care dollars. • Members are appointed • political ‘hot potato’ • LHIN concept may change with change in government

  33. Decision Making in Ontario (4) • Politics • Many decisions are politically motivated not necessarily evidence based or efficient • HPV vaccine • Newborn screening • Preoperative use of EPO

  34. 78.1: MEDICAL ECONOMICS (1) • Define the socio-economic rationales, implications and consequences of medical care • Medical care has impact on costs to society; both financial and other (non monetary) resources. • This objective aims to raise awareness of these types of issues.

  35. MEDICAL ECONOMICS (2) • Does effective medical care reduce health care spending? • How do we value non-fiscal benefits such as quality of life, ‘health’, not being dead? • Should resources be spent on health or other societal objectives? • How do we value non-traditional expenditures, etc. which impact on health • Healthy Public Policy

  36. Year

  37. Principles of cost-containment • Three approaches to improve cost effectiveness of health care delivery • Eliminate ineffective care • Reduce costs of effective care • Substitute cheaper but equally effective care, • day surgery for hospital admission, • nurse practitioners for some primary care, • generic drugs • Reduce unit costs • reduce salaries (risk of reduced effectiveness) or fees (but quantity provided may increase) • Adopt only new interventions that are cost effective

  38. Assessing Cost Effectiveness

  39. Types of economic analysis (SIM web link)

  40. Economic Evaluation Example Coyle D, Coyle K, Bettinger JS, Halperin SA, Vaudry W, Scheifele DW, Le Saux N. Cost effectiveness of infant vaccination for rotavirus in Canada. CJIDDM 2012;23 71- 77

  41. Acknowledgements • The economic analysis was funded by a grant from the Public Health Agency of Canada to the Canadian Paediatric Society.

  42. Schematic of Model Dead No infection Infection Previous infection

  43. Data Inputs (1) • Monthly probability of primary RV infection • Probability of death from RV per case of RV • Relative risk reduction for secondary infection versus primary infection • Monthly probability of death from other causes • Distribution of RV infections without vaccination • Not requiring medical management, GP visit, ED visit, Hospitalization

  44. Data Inputs (2) • Vaccine Efficacy • Meta analysis • Vaccine uptake • Utility Values • Child and caregiver with and without rotavirus • Vaccine Costs • Costs of Rotavirus cases • Hospitalization, Emergency dept. visit, GP visit

  45. Unvaccinated Population

  46. Vaccinated Population

  47. Cost Effectiveness of Infant Vaccination for Rotavirus

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