A strategy to improve priority setting in health care institutions.

Health Care Anal

Collaborative Program in Bioethics, Department of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, Joint Centre for Bioethics, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G IL4.

Published: March 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • Priority setting in health systems is a critical issue for 21st-century healthcare policy, requiring improved processes at institutional levels.
  • Normative and empirical approaches are both essential but insufficient on their own; normative helps clarify values while empirical shows current practices, yet neither tells us what should be done.
  • The proposed strategy combines case study research, interdisciplinary evaluation with an ethical framework, and action research to create a practical method for improving priority setting across various healthcare institutions.

Article Abstract

Priority setting (also known as resource allocation or rationing) occurs at every level of every health system and is one of the most significant health care policy questions of the 21st century. Because it is so prevalent and context specific, improving priority setting in a health system entails improving it in the institutions that constitute the system. But, how should this be done? Normative approaches are necessary because they help identify key values that clarify policy choices, but insufficient because different approaches lead to different conclusions and there is no consensus about which ones are correct, and they are too abstract to be directly used in actual decision making. Empirical approaches are necessary because they help to identify what is being done and what can be done, but are insufficient because they cannot identify what should be done. Moreover, to be really helpful, an improvement strategy must utilize rigorous research methods that are able to analyze and capture experience so that past problems are corrected and lessons can be shared with others. Therefore, a constructive, practical and accessible improvement strategy must be research-based and combine both normative and empirical methods. In this paper we propose a research-based improvement strategy that involves combining three linked methods: case study research to describe priority setting; interdisciplinary research to evaluate the description using an ethical framework; and action research to improve priority setting. This describe-evaluate-improve strategy is a generalizable method that can be used in different health care institutions to improve priority setting in that context.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1025338013629DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

priority setting
24
improve priority
12
health care
12
improvement strategy
12
setting health
8
care institutions
8
health system
8
approaches help
8
help identify
8
priority
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!