Lack A, Edwards R T, Boland A
Anaesthetic Department, Salisbury Health Care NHS Trust, UK.
J Health Serv Res Policy. 2000 Apr;5(2):83-8. doi: 10.1177/135581960000500205.
This paper describes a waiting list patients' points scheme under development in Salisbury, UK, for the fair management of elective inpatient and day case waiting lists. The paper illustrates how points can be assigned to patients on a waiting list to indicate their relative unmet need, and illustrates the impact on case mix and resource use of the implementations of the points system versus 'first come, first served'. The paper explores a range of philosophical and technical questions raised by the points system.
The Salisbury Priority Scoring System enables surgeons to assign relative priority to patients at the time they are placed on a waiting list for elective health care. Points are assigned to patients to reflect the rate of progress of their disease, pain or distress, disability or dependence on others, loss of usual occupation and time already waited. In recognition of the need for resource planning alongside the prioritization of elective inpatients and day case waiting lists, a range of iso-resource groups has been developed for all procedures on these lists. These categorize procedures in terms of their resource use (i.e. bed days and theatre time required).
In a modelling exercise, application of the Salisbury Points Scheme to a 'first come, first served' orthopaedic waiting list produced considerable changes in the order of patients to be treated. Only seven patients appeared in the first 20 patients to be treated under both regimes. The Salisbury Scheme required fewer resources to treat its first 20 patients than 'first come, first served' and met more Salisbury-defined 'need', but eliminated fewer days of waiting from the list.
Development of a points scheme and iso-resource groupings opens up opportunities for more sophisticated purchasing, based on treating patients in order of unmet need rather than according to arbitrary maximum waiting time guarantees, as has been the dominant policy on waiting lists pursued in the UK, Australia, and Sweden, to date. However, such schemes raise three issues: first, the necessity of defining need as a composite of clinical and social factors; second the necessity to determine the acceptability of explicit prioritization to both health care professionals and patients; third, the thorny issue of whether such prioritization schemes will lead to 'gaming' by well-meaning general practitioners and specialists, aiming to secure the priority of their own patients and clinical specialty. Rigorous piloting of schemes, such as that developed at Salisbury, will be required to identify their dynamic effect over time on case mix, waiting time and resource use.
本文介绍了英国索尔兹伯里正在制定的一份等候名单患者积分方案,用于公平管理择期住院患者和日间手术等候名单。本文阐述了如何给等候名单上的患者分配积分以表明其相对未满足的需求,并说明了积分系统相对于“先到先得”实施方式对病例组合和资源使用的影响。本文探讨了积分系统引发的一系列哲学和技术问题。
索尔兹伯里优先评分系统使外科医生能够在患者被列入择期医疗等候名单时为其分配相对优先级。给患者分配积分以反映其疾病进展速度、疼痛或痛苦程度、残疾或对他人的依赖程度、失去正常职业以及已等待的时间。认识到在对择期住院患者和日间手术等候名单进行优先排序的同时进行资源规划的必要性,已针对这些名单上的所有手术制定了一系列等资源组。这些等资源组根据手术的资源使用情况(即所需的住院天数和手术时间)对手术进行分类。
在一次建模练习中,将索尔兹伯里积分方案应用于一个“先到先得”的骨科等候名单,导致待治疗患者的顺序发生了相当大的变化。在两种制度下,只有7名患者出现在前20名待治疗患者中。与“先到先得”相比,索尔兹伯里方案治疗前20名患者所需的资源更少,满足了更多索尔兹伯里定义的“需求”,但从名单上消除的等待天数更少。
制定积分方案和等资源分组为更复杂的采购创造了机会,这种采购是基于按照未满足的需求顺序治疗患者,而不是像英国、澳大利亚和瑞典迄今为止在等候名单上占主导地位的政策那样,根据任意设定的最长等待时间保证来进行。然而,这样的方案引发了三个问题:第一,将需求定义为临床和社会因素综合考量的必要性;第二,确定明确的优先排序对医疗保健专业人员和患者的可接受性的必要性;第三,这样的优先排序方案是否会导致善意的全科医生和专科医生进行“策略性操作”这一棘手问题,他们旨在确保自己患者和临床专科的优先地位。需要对索尔兹伯里制定的此类方案进行严格试点,以确定其随着时间推移对病例组合、等待时间和资源使用的动态影响。