Simon J, Ruiz U
Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain.
Int J Health Plann Manage. 1995 Jul-Sep;10(3):193-200. doi: 10.1002/hpm.4740100305.
The profound political changes that followed the Spanish Constitution of 1978 have had a major influence in the healthcare offered to the Spanish population. The healthcare provision once centred in a single government agency, the Instituto Nacional de la Salud (INSALUD), is now being decentralized to the 17 autonomous regions established by the Constitution. Existing Spanish legislation, traditional accountability and established professional roles are determinant factors in defining the boundaries amongst the main stakeholders in the healthcare accreditation issue. Hospital accreditation has been traditionally understood by the central government agency as a way to assure regulated standards for licensing the operations of healthcare facilities. However, recent public concern over the quality of healthcare, health departments' accountability and health professional technical knowledge are now creating the search for a common approach to accreditation in Spain.
1978年西班牙宪法颁布后发生的深刻政治变革,对向西班牙民众提供的医疗保健产生了重大影响。曾经集中于单一政府机构——国家卫生研究所(INSALUD)的医疗保健服务,如今正下放至宪法设立的17个自治区。西班牙现行立法、传统问责制以及既定的专业角色,是界定医疗保健认证问题主要利益相关者之间界限的决定性因素。传统上,中央政府机构将医院认证视为确保医疗设施运营许可符合规范标准的一种方式。然而,最近公众对医疗保健质量、卫生部门问责制以及卫生专业技术知识的关注,正在促使西班牙寻求一种通用的认证方法。