“这是在喂养野兽”:来自澳大利亚案例研究分析的公共卫生监督和应对治理的教训。

IF 5.1 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Stephanie M Topp, Alexandra Edelman, Thu Nguyen, Emma S McBryde, Sue Devine, Tammy Allen, Jeffrey Warner, Julie Mudd, Paul F Horwood
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:公共卫生是政府的一项核心责任,卫生部或部门负责制定和确保遵守标准、管理绩效并根据需要进行改革。尽管澳大利亚北昆士兰州拥有完善的卫生基础设施,但2019冠状病毒病大流行暴露了其公共卫生监测和应对系统的重大漏洞。在全球范围内,研究强调了人类和文化因素(“系统软件”)如何影响基础设施、治理和数据系统(“系统硬件”)的有效性。本研究考察了这些要素之间的相互作用,以考察在全国范围内加强传染病监测和应对的具体治理挑战和机遇。方法:采用嵌入式案例研究设计,通过访谈(n=47)、文献回顾和NQ卫生服务(2020年10月至2021年12月)的观察,我们分析了四个疾病单位- covid -19、结核病(TB)、虫媒病毒和性传播感染(STIs)。数据被映射到谢赫和他的同事的硬件-软件框架,以检查澳大利亚北部这一地区治理瓶颈的本质。结果:出现了两个关键的治理挑战:(1)问责赤字——在昆士兰下放的卫生服务治理模式中,医院和卫生服务(hhs)缺乏明确的报告或绩效监测系统,导致卫生服务领导层对传染病功能的资源优先级不一致。在卫生保健系统内,公共卫生单位(phu)面临系统性资金不足,预防服务仅占一些卫生服务预算的0.1%。(2)数据治理失败——分散、孤立的数据系统、限制性数据共享规范和规避风险的文化阻碍了协调监测和响应工作。数据共享伙伴关系中的互操作性弱和不信任进一步损害了系统的有效性。结论:本研究突出了政治、规范和结构因素如何影响公共卫生绩效,以及更常见的评估功能和技术层面。研究结果表明,有必要改进绩效监测系统、领导和数据治理,以在NQ建立一个有效、负责任和数据驱动的监测和响应系统。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"It's Feeding the Beast": Lessons for Governance of Public Health Surveillance and Response From an Australian Case Study Analysis.

Background: Public health is a core governmental responsibility, with ministries or departments of health responsible for setting and ensuring adherence to standards, managing performance and instituting reforms as required. Although North Queensland (NQ), Australia has a well-developed health infrastructure, the COVID-19 pandemic exposed significant vulnerabilities in its public health surveillance and response system. Globally, research has highlighted how human and cultural elements ("system software") influence the effectiveness of infrastructure, governance, and data systems ("system hardware"). This study examines the interaction between these elements to examine specific governance challenges and opportunities for strengthening communicable disease surveillance and response in NQ.

Methods: Using an embedded case study design, we analysed four disease units-COVID-19, tuberculosis (TB), arboviruses, and sexually transmitted infections (STIs)-through interviews (n=47), document review, and observations across NQ health services (October 2020-December 2021). Data were mapped against Sheikh and colleagues' hardware-software framework to examine the nature of governance bottlenecks in this region of northern Australia.

Results: Two key governance challenges emerged: (1) Accountability deficits-Hospital and Health Services (HHSs) lacked clear reporting or performance monitoring systems within Queensland's devolved health service governance model, contributing to inconsistent prioritisation of resourcing for communicable disease functions by health service leadership. Within HHSs, public health units (PHUs) faced systemic underfunding, with prevention services accounting for as little as 0.1% of some health service budgets. (2) Data governance failures-Fragmented, siloed data systems, restrictive data-sharing norms, and risk-averse culture hindered coordinated surveillance and response efforts. Weak interoperability and mistrust in data-sharing partnerships further compromised system effectiveness.

Conclusion: This study highlights how political, normative, and structural factors shape public health performance alongside the more commonly assessed functional and technical dimensions. Findings suggest the need to improve performance monitoring systems, leadership, and data governance to build an effective, accountable, and data-driven surveillance and response system in NQ.

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来源期刊
International Journal of Health Policy and Management
International Journal of Health Policy and Management Health Professions-Health Information Management
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
14.30%
发文量
142
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal of Health Policy and Management (IJHPM) is a monthly open access, peer-reviewed journal which serves as an international and interdisciplinary setting for the dissemination of health policy and management research. It brings together individual specialties from different fields, notably health management/policy/economics, epidemiology, social/public policy, and philosophy into a dynamic academic mix.
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