Future Strategic Priorities of the Swiss Decentralized Healthcare System: A COVID-19 Case Study.

Miriam Mi-Rim Lee Burger, Kaitlin Elizabeth Large, Yiqi Liu, Melissa Cigdem Coyle, Cherish Tariro Gamanya, Jean-François Etter
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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic exposed a multitude of vulnerabilities in Switzerland's decentralized healthcare system and highlighted the urgent need to strengthen Switzerland's capacity to respond to health crises and disease outbreaks. In this article, we draw on three distinct areas of analysis of the current functioning of the Swiss healthcare system to examine its strengths and weaknesses, which can serve as a basis for future considerations and strategic priorities. First, we analyze the different levels of nine non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs), as defined by the ETH KOF Stringency Index and implemented in the Swiss cantons of Zurich, Vaud, and Ticino, compared with the rate of positive COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths. We find that there was no strong correlation between the severity of the nine non-pharmaceutical interventions implemented and lower rates of positive COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths. Second, we examine the challenges of Switzerland's decentralized healthcare system through a literature review and with empirical data obtained from semi-structured interviews with health professionals in Switzerland. We conclude our analysis with the role of central authorities during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results demonstrate that during a national emergency in Switzerland, taking into account other factors that influence the success of a pandemic strategy, there is an opportunity for a more unified, centralized response to reduce the social and economic toll of the pandemic without necessarily risking greater health damage. We recommend that the Swiss federal government use a combination of decentralized and centralized public health and policy approaches and promote greater private-public collaboration with direct communication channels among policymakers, public health stakeholders, and the public to improve pandemic preparedness and response.

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瑞士分散式医疗体系的未来战略重点:COVID-19案例研究
2019冠状病毒病大流行暴露了瑞士分散的医疗保健系统的诸多脆弱性,凸显了加强瑞士应对卫生危机和疾病暴发能力的迫切需要。在这篇文章中,我们利用三个不同的领域分析瑞士医疗保健系统的当前功能,以检查其优势和劣势,这可以作为未来考虑和战略重点的基础。首先,我们分析了由ETH KOF严格指数定义并在瑞士苏黎世、沃州和提奇诺州实施的9种非药物干预措施(npi)的不同水平,并与COVID-19阳性病例率、住院率和死亡率进行了比较。我们发现,实施的九种非药物干预措施的严重程度与较低的COVID-19阳性病例率、住院率和死亡率之间没有很强的相关性。其次,我们通过文献综述和从瑞士卫生专业人员的半结构化访谈中获得的经验数据来研究瑞士分散医疗保健系统的挑战。最后,我们对中央政府在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间的作用进行了分析。结果表明,在瑞士国家紧急状态期间,考虑到影响大流行病战略成功的其他因素,有机会采取更加统一和集中的应对措施,减少大流行病造成的社会和经济损失,而不必冒更大的健康损害风险。我们建议瑞士联邦政府将分散和集中的公共卫生和政策方法结合起来,通过决策者、公共卫生利益攸关方和公众之间的直接沟通渠道,促进更多的公私合作,以改进大流行的准备和应对工作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
3.60
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