澳大利亚政府卫生部门如何获得卫生经济学建议,为卫生决策提供信息?一项调查。

Lynne Madden, Lesley King, Alan Shiell
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引用次数: 8

摘要

背景:政府预期卫生经济分析将有助于基于证据的政策制定。在澳大利亚,这一期望得到满足的早期例子包括对乳房和子宫颈筛查的经济评估。然而,在需要这种建议的卫生服务中整合卫生经济学的水平似乎参差不齐。我们试图描述澳大利亚的政府卫生部门如何使用专家卫生经济建议来为政策和规划提供信息,以及他们获得这些建议的机制。方法:通过对澳大利亚(州、地区和国家)所有卫生部门雇用的经济学家和非经济学家的有目的样本进行访谈,寻求描述在卫生决策中获得卫生经济学投入的安排的信息。这项调查于2004年8月进行。为了帮助解释结果,确定了八种卫生经济功能。作为比较,新南威尔士州的其他四个政府部门提供了他们获得经济建议的信息。结果:除一个卫生部门外,所有卫生部门均报告为卫生经济学专业知识的当前用户。从建立自给自足的内部单位的组织能力到与外部来源建立联系,描述了各种安排来实现这一目标。然而,在卫生领域雇用的经济学家或卫生经济学家的专业职位很少。提出了一个框架,将这些采购咨询意见的安排与需要满足的八项共同卫生经济职能联系起来。所有其他非卫生政府部门都获得了经济咨询,其中三个部门设有内部单位。讨论:在过去30年中,通过各种结构和战略机制,澳大利亚建立了一个小规模的卫生经济学能力。卫生部门重视卫生经济建议,并利用各种安排来获得这些建议。这些安排的优点和缺点取决于所要执行的任务。缺乏统一的方法表明,卫生部门仍在寻求将这种形式的专家建议纳入主流决策的最佳途径。含义:总结了政府获取专业服务的方式。演示如何将组织对专业服务的需求描述为一组功能。这一方法可用于评估对其他专业咨询领域的需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How do government health departments in Australia access health economics advice to inform decisions for health? A survey.

Background: Government anticipates that health economic analysis will contribute to evidence-based policy development. Early examples in Australia where this expectation has been met include the economic evaluations of breast and cervical screening. However, the level of integration of health economics within health services that require this advice appears uneven. We sought to describe how government health departments in Australia use specialist health economic advice to inform policy and planning and the mechanisms through which they access this advice.

Methods: Information describing the arrangements for gaining health economics input into health decision-making was sought through interviews with a purposeful sample of economists and non-economists employed by all departments of health in Australia (state, territories and national). The survey was undertaken in August 2004. To aid interpretation of the results eight health economic functions were identified. As a comparison, four other government departments in NSW provided information about their access to economic advice.

Results: All health departments except one reported being current users of health economics expertise. A variety of arrangements were described to source this, from building organisational capacity with self-sufficient in-house units to forging links with external sources. However, specialist positions for economists or health economists employed within health were few. A framework mapping these arrangements for sourcing advice with the eight common health economic functions to be met is presented. All other non-health government departments approached accessed economic advice, with three having in-house units.

Discussion: A small health economics capacity in Australia has been established over the past 30 years through a variety of structural and strategic mechanisms. Health departments value health economic advice and use a variety of arrangements to obtain this. These arrangements have strengths and weaknesses depending upon the task to be undertaken. The lack of uniformity of approach suggests that health departments are still seeking the best ways to incorporate this form of specialist advice into mainstream decision-making.

Implications: Summarises ways that governments source specialist services. Demonstrates how to describe an organisation's need for specialist services as a set of functions. This approach could be applied to assessing need for other specialist areas of advice.

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