Valentine Nicole, Darby Charles, Bonsel Gouke J
Information, Evidence and Research Cluster, World Health Organization, Ave Appia 20, Geneva, Switzerland.
Soc Sci Med. 2008 May;66(9):1939-50. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2007.12.002. Epub 2008 Mar 3.
Quality of care research has reached some agreement on concepts like structure, process and outcome, and non-clinical versus clinical processes of care. These concepts are commonly explored through surveys measuring patient experiences, yet few surveys have focused on patient, or "user", priorities across different quality dimensions. Population surveys on priorities can contribute to, although not replace participation in, policy decision making. Using 105,806 survey interview records from the World Health Organization's (WHO's) general population surveys in 41 countries, this paper describes the relative importance of eight domains in the non-clinical quality of care concept WHO calls "health systems responsiveness". Responsiveness domains are divided into interpersonal domains (dignity, autonomy, communication and confidentiality) and structural domains (quality of basic amenities, choice, access to social support networks and prompt attention). This paper explores variations in domain importance by country-level variables (country of residence, human development, health system expenditure, and "geographic zones") and by subpopulations defined by sex, age, education, health status, and utilization. Most respondents selected prompt attention as the most important domain. Dignity was selected second, followed by communication. Access to social support networks was identified as the least important domain. In general, convergence in rankings was stronger across subpopulations within countries than across countries. Yet even across diverse countries, there was more convergence than divergence in views. These results provide a ranking of quality of care criteria for consideration during health reform processes further to the usual emphasis on clinical quality and supply-side efficiency.
医疗服务质量研究在诸如结构、过程和结果以及非临床与临床医疗过程等概念上已达成一些共识。这些概念通常通过衡量患者体验的调查来探究,但很少有调查关注患者或“使用者”在不同质量维度上的优先事项。关于优先事项的人口调查虽不能取代参与政策决策,但可对其有所贡献。本文利用世界卫生组织(WHO)在41个国家进行的一般人口调查中的105,806份调查访谈记录,描述了世界卫生组织所称的“卫生系统响应性”这一非临床医疗服务质量概念中八个领域的相对重要性。响应性领域分为人际领域(尊严、自主性、沟通和保密性)和结构领域(基本设施质量、选择、获得社会支持网络的机会和及时关注)。本文探讨了按国家层面变量(居住国、人类发展、卫生系统支出和“地理区域”)以及按性别、年龄、教育程度、健康状况和利用情况定义的亚人群划分的领域重要性差异。大多数受访者选择及时关注作为最重要的领域。尊严被选为第二重要的领域,其次是沟通。获得社会支持网络被确定为最不重要的领域。总体而言,各国国内亚人群之间的排名趋同比各国之间的趋同性更强。然而,即使在不同国家之间,观点上也是趋同多于分歧。这些结果提供了一份医疗服务质量标准的排名,以供在卫生改革过程中考虑,除了通常对临床质量和供应方效率的强调之外。