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The Economics of Clinical Governance
Brian Ferguson, Professor of Health Economics, Nuffield Institute for Health, University of Leeds;
and Head of Clinical Governance, North Yorkshire Health Authority
Professors
“a professor is a person who tells you what you know already, but in a way you cannot understand”
Principles underlying the approach to clinical effectiveness (August 1997)
co-operation between providers and local commissioning groups, based on jointly agreed priorities;
recognise the need to develop effective links between clinical audit, continuous professional development and local R&D initiatives;
recognising the importance of culture is vital; this is a long-term agenda: behavioural change takes time; the focus should be upon improving health outcomes for patients
and the public in general; there are limits to the evidence-based approach which if taken too
far can place a disproportionate emphasis upon guidelines, protocols and a rational, mechanistic approach.
Some reflections
changing practice takes time what gets in the way?
suspicion about motives perceived lack of resources structural change
working across 1o and 2o care is essential in bringing about changes in patient care
One of the two great lies
“I’m from the Health Authority and I’m here to help......”
Clinical governance: more than a new label
same elements as the previous label (clinical effectiveness)
a statutory duty for quality on all NHS organisations
explicit link to performance an opportunity for resources to follow measurable
improvements in quality
Clinical Governance: what can the ‘dismal science’ contribute?
Economics and theories
“A first-rate theory predicts, a second-rate theory forbids and a third-rate theory explains after the event”
Important elements of clinical governance
identifying the best available evidence base on clinical and cost-effectiveness
continuous professional development clinical guidelines clinical risk management R&D advice on clinically and cost-effective prescribing clinical audit performance assessment (of quality standards and changes) analysis and interpretation of information on current practice
Some principles
there are limits to guidelines and protocols recognising the importance of culture is vital McKee and Clarke (1995): “the most enthusiastic advocates....may
have paid insufficient attention to the uncertainty inherent in clinical practice, with the imposition of a spurious rationality on a sometimes inherently irrational process”
Service excellence in health care (1)
Mayer and Cates (1999)
Journal of the American Medical Association, Volume 282, Number 13
Service excellence in health care (2)
patients want reports on both the quality of clinical care and the quality of service
patients’ perceptions of service satisfaction have a clear impact on their perceptions of quality of care
technical expertise must be combined with service excellence in health care, as well as the patient’s perception of that care, to improve clinical care overall
Health care professionals’ distinctions between patients and customers (Mayer and Cates, 1999)
Acutely ill or injured Less severely ill
Dependent on physician Independent
Power / control with physician Power / control with customer
Less choice More choice
Technical expertise required Service skills required
Higher satisfaction for clinician Lower satisfaction for clinician
High clarity of treatment Less clarity of treatment
Time-dependent Service-dependent
A less scientific distinction between patients and customers
“the more horizontal they are, the more they are a patient; the more vertical they are, the more they are a customer”
Improving process efficiency
could patient details be recorded more efficiently? could information on the risks and benefits of
different care pathways be provided more efficiently?
if ophthalmology services were configured differently, could demand be managed better?
Factors in effective clinical teams
showing a positive attitude to patients finding out what patients and colleagues think about the
quality of care delivered assuming collective responsibility for performance showing leadership and competent management having clear values and standards demonstrating an enthusiasm to learn communicating well caring for each member of the team
Are Guidelines Following Guidelines?: the methodological quality of clinical practice
guidelines in the peer-reviewed medical literature
Shaneyfelt, Mayo-Smith and Rothwangl, JAMA, May 26, 1999
Cost MC
Qualityqmin qm qmax q*
The cost of improving quality
Measuring performance
“measurement alone does not hold the key to improvement....measuring could be an asset in improvement if and only if it were connected to curiosity - were part of a culture primarily of learning and enquiry, not primarily of judgement and contingency”
Berwick (1998)
Incentives
aligning financial and clinical incentives to improve quality
“money following quality”?
Health Authorities: the co-ordinators of clinical governance arrangements
PCGs’ commissioning decisions within HImP framework longer-term service agreements between HAs/PCGs &
Trusts need to reflect overall approach to quality and performance assessment within the HImP
national guidelines will need to be implemented consistently within and across PCGs and Trusts
CHI: HAs and providers will be expected to resolve local difficulties but HA can trigger RO / CHI involvement
Projects aimed at bringing about evidence-based change in North Yorkshire
cost-effectiveness of a one-stop prostate assessment clinic
improving the quality of information on orthopaedic surgery
One-stop prostate assessment clinic at Airedale General Hospital
Objectives: to develop shared care guidelines, evidence-based
where possible to evaluate the operational efficiency of the clinic
within established evidence on best practice a joint project between Trust, HA and local GPs clinic aims to provide a one-stop diagnosis for patients
with BPH and then to refer for appropriate treatment and follow-up
Operational efficiency assessment (1)
little published evidence on the efficiency of a one-stop clinic but evidence of effectiveness for the diagnostic steps carried out within the clinic
established a flow diagram of the different paths patients visiting the clinic could take
this revealed that for most patients the clinic was not one-stop
Operational efficiency assessment (2)
attached times and notional costs to the extra visits patients made to the clinic
identified the barriers to the clinic being truly one-stop:
ultrasound test results
business case developed for providing the clinic with the facilities to carry out ultrasound testing on the same day as the clinic
Evidence base (Total Hip Replacement)
health needs assessment volume 1 (1994) Effective Health Care Bulletin (October 1996) Health Technology Assessment Report (1998):
cemented designs show good 10-15 year + survival results
models with good comparable results include the Stanmore, Howse, Lubinus, Exeter and Charnley
economic model estimates total expected costs based on Charnley survival data and actual hospital costs
Evidence base (Total Knee Replacement)
health needs assessment volume 1 (1994) the ‘gold standard’ knee prosthesis is not clear
from the literature and a consensus of opinion is needed
only five TKR implants on the UK market have published survival analyses of 10 years or more [Liow and Murray, 1997]
Issues for consideration
evidence-based (cost-effective) prosthesis purchasing
improving the quality of data measuring outcomes
clinical measures patient outcome measures revision rates
criteria for referral and prioritising waiting lists
The role of N.I.C.E.
to “give a strong lead on clinical and cost effectiveness, drawing up new guidelines and ensuring they reach all parts of the health service”
to improve the quality of clinical services across the NHS:
by evaluating new drugs and new technologies to see if they have a cost-effective role in the NHS;
by formulating guidelines on numerous conditions for doctors, carers and patients;
by advising on methods of audit in relation to guidelines.
Why should clinical guidelines matter to Health Authorities?
a quality assurance tool one means of ensuring equitable (access to) health
care an implicit or explicit aid to prioritisation
decisions a route to improving health outcomes
Economic questions
if guidelines lead to greater centralisation of services, what resources can be expected to be released locally? fixed, semi-fixed and variable cost elements
what are the likely costs and benefits of targeting different risk groups? marginal effects of targeting different groups
Some general (unresolved) issues
designing appropriate incentive systems for developing clinical governance & achieving measurable improvements in quality of care
making the PCG clinical governance agenda the agenda of all the constituent practices;
anticipating and tackling “poor clinical performance” reconciling independent contractor status and professional self-
regulation with clinical governance accessing clinical data and improving data coding & quality; establishing processes for supporting practices / individuals where
consistently ‘poor performance’ is identified; ensuring a focus on clinical teams (relative performance is frequently a
reflection of system rather than individual success or failure)
Some concluding points
many of the issues of clinical governance are economic in nature
aligning clinical and financial incentives will be important real co-operation across organisations and care boundaries
is essential service quality and technical expertise should go hand-in-
hand with patients’ perceptions of care Health Authorities and PCGs have a responsibility to take
the wider view to protect the individual clinician / patient relationship