Behrendt Katja, Groene Oliver
Department of Health Services Research and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Department of Health Services Research and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK; Department of Health Services Research and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK; and Optimedis AG, Hamburg, Germany.
Health Policy. 2016 Oct;120(10):1151-1161. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2016.08.003. Epub 2016 Sep 7.
Public reporting of surgeon outcomes has become a key strategy in the English NHS to ensure accountability and improve the quality of care. Much of the evidence that supported the design of the strategy originates from the USA. This report aims to assess how the evidence on public reporting could be harnessed for cross-country translation of this health system strategy; in particular, to gauge the expected results of the UK surgeon outcome initiative and to propose criteria that elucidate that prerequisites and factors that are needed to public reporting effective.
A systematic search of academic databases was followed by snowballing from the reference lists. Only peer-reviewed articles and primary studies were included.
25 studies from the USA (n=22) and the UK (n=3) were included. Suggestive evidence of a negative effect on access to surgery was found for high-risk patients and non-whites; one survey indicated presence of gaming. There was anecdotal evidence of quality improvement measures adopted by low-rated hospitals in New York. Most studies reported only on the effectiveness of public reporting, rather than addressing how effects accrue. This limits cross-country transferability of policy lessons. Based on our analysis, we propose factors impacting on the transferability of the evidence underlying the public reporting of surgeon outcomes, which may inform the adoption of this strategy in other health systems.
There is some evidence that public reporting can be an incentive for low performing surgeons to improve quality. Negative incentive on patient selection as suggested in the USA have not yet been observed in the UK.
公布外科医生的治疗结果已成为英国国民医疗服务体系(NHS)确保问责制和提高医疗质量的一项关键策略。支持该策略设计的许多证据都源自美国。本报告旨在评估如何利用关于公开报告的证据来对这一卫生系统策略进行跨国转化;特别是,评估英国外科医生治疗结果倡议的预期成效,并提出阐明公开报告有效所需的先决条件和因素的标准。
在对学术数据库进行系统检索之后,从参考文献列表中进行滚雪球式搜索。仅纳入同行评审文章和原始研究。
纳入了来自美国的25项研究(n = 22)和英国的3项研究(n = 3)。发现有迹象表明,公开报告对高风险患者和非白人的手术可及性有负面影响;一项调查表明存在数据造假行为。有传闻证据显示纽约评级较低的医院采取了质量改进措施。大多数研究仅报告了公开报告的有效性,而未涉及效果是如何产生的。这限制了政策经验教训的跨国可转移性。基于我们的分析,我们提出了影响外科医生治疗结果公开报告所依据证据可转移性的因素,这可能为其他卫生系统采用这一策略提供参考。
有证据表明,公开报告可以激励表现不佳的外科医生提高质量。在美国所暗示的对患者选择的负面激励在英国尚未观察到。