Authors
Chopra,Mickey, Hou,Xiaohui, Nimako,Kojo Twum, Roder-Dewan,Sanam Claudia
- Disclosure Date
- 2024/05/30
- Disclosure Status
- Disclosed
- Doc Name
- Hospitals in Health Systems : Opportunities for Efficient, High-quality, and Integrated Care
- Product Line
- Advisory Services & Analytics
- Published in
- United States of America
- Rel Proj ID
- 1W-Towards More Effective, Agile, Integrated, And Accountable Hosp -- P178777
- Sector
- Public Administration - Health
- Theme
- Health Systems and Policies,Human Development and Gender,Private Sector Delivery in Health,Reproductive and Maternal Health,Health Finance,Health System Strengthening,Health Service Delivery
- Unit Owning
- HNP Global (HHNGE)
- Version Type
- Revised
- Volume No
- 1
Table of Contents
- Contents 3
- Tables 4
- Figures 5
- Acknowledgments 7
- About the Authors 8
- Authors 8
- Abbreviations and Acronyms 13
- Executive Summary 16
- Hospitals and Health Care 16
- Three Key Operating Principles 17
- Areas of Action 17
- Future Opportunities 18
- Figure 1: Insights Across Four Key Areas of Reform (Chapter Topics) 18
- References 18
- SECTION 1 Overview 19
- Chapter 1: Overview: Why Hospitals, and Why This Publication 20
- Hospitals and Health Care 20
- Hospitals and Primary Care: Complementary Components for Health 20
- Multiple Challenges for Hospital Sector: Key Thematic Areas 21
- Figure 1.1: Health Spending on Inpatient Curative Care, Across Countries, by Income Groups 21
- Operationalizing Reform: Practical—and Mixed—Lessons from the Field 23
- Reconsidering Care Models, and Scaling Reform 24
- Shifting Focus: Targeting Technical Interventions in Efficiency, Quality, and Integration 24
- Enhancing Quality: Opportunities from the Macro to the Micro Levels of Action 26
- Fostering Smarter Integration 27
- How This Report is Organized: Target Audience and Objectives, Structure, and Future Opportunities 28
- References 29
- SECTION 2 Efficiency as an entry point for hospital reform 31
- Chapter 2: Hospital Autonomy in Poland 32
- Key Messages 32
- Introduction 32
- Figure 2.1: National Health Fund Expenditures by Types of Services, 2003-2019 (PLN billion) 33
- Figure 2.2: Hospital Debts as a Percentage of GDP, 2003-2020 34
- Overview of Hospital Reforms in Poland 34
- Table 2.1: Overview of Hospital Sector Reforms in Poland 35
- Corporatization of Public Hospitals 37
- Table 2.2: General Structure of Hospital Provider Organizational Forms in Poland 38
- Figure 2.3: Ownership Structure of SPZOZs in 2020 (n=575) 39
- The Role of the Single Public Purchaser of Hospital Services 39
- Figure 2.4: Annual Spending on Health, All Sources 40
- Conclusion 42
- References 43
- Chapter 3: Sri Lanka’s Road to a More Efficient Health System: Linking Hospital Reform and Primary Health Care Strengthening 44
- Key Messages 44
- Introduction 44
- Figure 3.1: Sri Lanka: A Top Performer for Many Health Indicators (World Development Indicators, n.d.) 45
- Hospital Financing in Sri Lanka 46
- Figure 3.2: Per Capita Hospital Expenditure 46
- Figure 3.3: Proportion of Expenditure by Level 46
- Box 3.1: An Overview of Hospitals in Sri Lanka 47
- Long-Range Trends in Hospital Spending 47
- Figure 3.4: Pattern of Public Hospital Expenditure 48
- Health Care Seeking Behavior in Sri Lanka: Tilted Toward Higher Levels of Care 48
- Figure 3.5: Outpatient Visits Per Capita Per Annum 49
- Figure 3.6: Inpatient services* 49
- Figure 3.7: Outpatient Use by Level of Care 49
- Figure 3.8: Inpatient Use by Level of Care 49
- Table 3.1: Hospital Beds at Each Level as Share of Total Number of Beds in the Public Sector 50
- Figure 3.9: Bed Occupancy Rate in 2017 50
- Improving the Efficiency of Sri Lanka’s Hospital Sector 51
- Strengthening Hospitals and Primary Care Simultaneously 51
- Priorities and Policy Options 51
- Conclusion 53
- References 54
- Chapter 4: Day Surgery Center in the West China Hospital 55
- Key Messages 55
- Introduction 55
- Figure 4.1: Algorithmic Identification of Procedures Eligible for One-Day Surgery Proposed by Gilliard et al. (2006). 56
- Implementing a Same-Day Facility in China 56
- Implementation of the Day Surgery Center 57
- Protocols and Baseline Requirements 57
- Criteria and Procedures 57
- Results 57
- Number of Surgeries 57
- Length of Stay and Cost 58
- Patient Perceptions 58
- Conclusions 58
- References 60
- Chapter 5: Acute Geriatric Units: A Care Strategy for Aging Populations 62
- Key Messages 62
- Introduction 62
- What are acute geriatric units? 62
- What does it take to create an AGU? 63
- Implementation Facilitators and Barriers 63
- Evidence of AGU Impacts 64
- Factors that Influence AGU Effectiveness 64
- Conclusions 65
- References 66
- SECTION 3 Quality as an entry point for hospital reform 68
- Chapter 6: Improving Quality and Safety in Perioperative Care: The Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) Program 69
- Key Messages 69
- Introduction 69
- Perioperative Care in Global Perspective 70
- Strategies to Improve Perioperative Care 70
- The ERAS Model 71
- Components of the ERAS Care Program 71
- Barriers and Facilitators to ERAS Scaling Up 71
- Challenges in Frontline Implementation 72
- Toward the Future: A Growing Global Network to Strengthen Perioperative Care 73
- Conclusions 73
- References 74
- Chapter 7: Regionalization as a Lever of Hospital Reform: The Case of Rural Obstetric Unit Closings in the United States, and Implications for Low- and Middle-Income Countries 75
- Key Messages 75
- Introduction 75
- Does regionalization of service delivery improve health outcomes? 76
- Regionalization of care through obstetric unit closings in the United States 77
- Figure 7.1: Maternity Care Deserts, 2020 77
- Figure 7.2: Access to Hospital-Based Obstetric Services for Rural Residents, Focusing on Highly Rural and Racially Diverse States, 2018 79
- Conclusions 80
- References 82
- Appendix: Levels of Maternal and Neonatal Care: Definitions, Capabilities, and Health Care Providers 84
- Chapter 8: Hospital Reform: Listening to Patient and Staff Experience, and Engaging the Broader Public 87
- Key Messages 87
- Introduction 87
- How can patient experience be used to improve health services? 88
- Current evidence for the impact of patient experience-based improvements on key outcomes 89
- Strengths and weaknesses of various approaches to the collection of patient and staff experiences 90
- Patient Experience Surveys and Measures 90
- Focus Groups 91
- Interviews 91
- Box 8.1: Resources for Patient Experience Research 92
- How Insights into Patient Experiences Can Be Used to Improve Care 93
- Community/Public Engagement 94
- Box 8.2: Feedback Mechanisms Available in One Coastal County in Kenya 94
- Figure 8.1: Conceptual Framework Describing Processes of Receiving and Responding to Public Feedback (Kagwanja et al. 2023) 95
- Conclusions 96
- References 97
- Appendix: Resources for Patient Experience Research (with full bibliography) 102
- Chapter 9: Microlevel Interventions for Improving Hospital Performance 103
- Key Messages 103
- Introduction 103
- Methodology 103
- Results 105
- Workforce Strategies 105
- Tools 107
- Patient Engagement and Patient-Centered Care 108
- Conclusion 110
- References 112
- SECTION 4 Integration as an entry point for hospital reform 117
- Chapter 10: Leveraging the Principles of Networks and Learning Systems to Improve the Quality of Hospital Care: The Clinical Information Network in Kenya 118
- Key Messages 118
- Quality and Safety of Care in Hospitals 118
- Improving Quality of Care 119
- Networks and Learning Systems 119
- The Kenyan Clinical Information Network 120
- Table 10.1: Operationalization of the Principles of the Kenyan Clinical Information Network (CIN). 120
- Developing the Intangible “Software” of CIN 121
- Impacts of CIN 122
- What is CIN an example of? 122
- Conclusions 123
- References 124
- Chapter 11: Networks of Practice in Ghana, and the Role of the District Hospital 128
- Key Messages 128
- Introduction 128
- Country Profile 128
- The History of Facility Networks in Ghana 129
- Policy Dialogue and National Adoption of a Networks of Practice Strategy 129
- Figure 11.1: Configuration of Networks of Practice in a District (illustrative) 130
- Evolution of the Role of the District Hospital in Ghana 131
- Conclusions 131
- References 133
- Chapter 12: The Development of Medical Alliances in China 134
- Key Messages 134
- Introduction 134
- MA Models by Organizational Governance 134
- MA Models by Intensity of Integration 135
- Provider Payment 135
- Table 12.1: The Provider Payment in Four Typical MAs 136
- Regulation 138
- Principles and Performance Assessment 138
- Figure 12.1: The Four Fundamental Principles of Constructing MAs 138
- Figure 12.2: Comprehensive Performance Assessment Program for MAs 138
- Measurement and Evaluation 139
- Table 12.2: Measuring Criteria and Description for MAs in Different Dimensions 139
- Figure 12.3: The Evaluation Procedure: Five Steps 140
- Ongoing Reform 140
- Figure 12.4: An Improved Medical Service Governance Model 140
- Private Sector Involvement 141
- The Rollout of Medical Alliances 141
- Figure 12.5: Key Policy Documents for MAs 142
- Figure 12.6: Distribution of MAs in the 118 Pilot Cities and Other Cities 142
- Figure 12.7: National Distribution of MAs by Provinces and Cities 143
- The Impact of Medical Alliances 143
- Figure 12.8: The Ratio and Growth Rate of Outpatient Visits Between Hospitals and Primary Medical Institutions 144
- Figure 12.9: The Ratio and Growth Rate of Hospital Admissions Between Hospitals and Primary Medical Institutions 145
- Conclusions 146
- References 148
- SECTION 5 Cross-cutting considerations for hospital reform 150
- Chapter 13: The Evolution of First Referral Hospitals 151
- Key Messages 151
- Introduction 151
- Figure 13.1: Model of health system based on primary health care taken from the WHO Western Pacific Series No.4 District Hospitals: Guidelines For Development. 152
- Clinical Services at First Referral Hospitals 153
- Table 13.1: Clinical Service Categories as Proposed by WHO, DCP2, and DCP3 (English, Ngugi, and Smith 201; WHO 1992a). 153
- Declining emphasis in policy 154
- Trajectory in Low-Resource Countries: Country Case Studies 155
- Sri Lanka 155
- Figure 13.2: Diagram Illustrating the Health Care Structure and Shared Care Cluster Approach in Sri Lanka 156
- South Africa 157
- Nepal 157
- Trajectory in High-Income Countries 157
- Germany 158
- United Kingdom 158
- South Korea 158
- Conclusions 159
- References 160
- Chapter 14: Building a New Hospital: Key Questions and Considerations 162
- Key Messages 162
- Introduction 162
- Main Investment Considerations 163
- Needs Analysis and Service Strategy 163
- Modelling Needs and Capacity 164
- Viable and Evidence-Based Models 164
- Location Decisions, and Understanding the Wider Impact of Change 165
- Environmental Sustainability and Resilience 165
- Flexibility and Resilience 165
- Financial and Business Case Questions 165
- Box 14.1: Critical Success Factors for Major Public Sector Investments 166
- The Planning Process 166
- Stakeholder Involvement 166
- Potential Pitfalls 166
- Evaluation 167
- Conclusions 167
- References 168
- Chapter 15: Essential Emergency and Critical Care 169
- Key Messages 169
- Critical Illness: An important Challenge for Hospitals 169
- Figure 15.1: Critical illness is the most severe form of acute illness. 170
- Figure 15.2: Three levels of critical care, graded by complexity and cost - and units where this care can be provided. 171
- Essential Emergency and Critical Care: A Feasible Approach for Impact 171
- Figure 15.3: EECC is the intersection of Essentialness and Critical Care 172
- Implementing Improved Critical Care 172
- Lessons to Guide Large-Scale Implementation of EECC 173
- Focus on Impact 173
- Learn from Other Cross-Cutting Initiatives 173
- Increasing Awareness and Implementation in All Settings 174
- The Role of Business Models 174
- Learning from Tanzania 174
- Next Steps for Maximizing Impact 174
- Conclusion 175
- References 176
- Chapter 16: Climate-Resilient and Sustainable Health Systems: Experiences from the Latin America and Caribbean Region 178
- Key Messages 178
- Introduction 178
- Definition of Climate-Resilient Health Systems: Challenges, Commitments, and Agenda 179
- Clinical Level 179
- Box 16.1: Low-Carbon Resilience, Clinical Level 179
- Network Level 180
- Box 16.2: Low-Carbon Resilience, Network Level 180
- System/National Level 180
- Box 16.3: Low-Carbon Resilience System, National Level 180
- From Operational Frameworks to Implementation: Cases from the Ground 181
- Furthering Hospital Infrastructure Standards 181
- Table 16.1: System Enablers and Present Challenges in the PforR financing in Colombia 182
- Table 16.2: System Enablers and Present Challenges in the Caribbean Project 183
- Integrating Health Systems in Disaster Risk Management 183
- Table 16.3: System Enablers and Present Challenges in CAT-DDO Operations in Colombia 184
- Lessons Learned and a Way Forward 184
- References 186
- SECTION 6 Moving Forward 187
- Chapter 17: Moving Forward: Urgency for Change in a Rapidly Warming Planet 188
- Taking a Systems Approach 188
- Urgency to Act 189
- Box 17.1: The World Bank at Work: Strengthening the Hospital Sector in the Caribbean through Resilient Networks of Care 190
- Conclusion 192
- Appendix: Review of Indicators for Tracking Hospital Service Delivery and Performance 194
- Commonly Reported Hospital Indicators 194
- Indicators Proposed for Mainstreaming 196