Kapiriri Lydia
Department of Health, Aging and Society, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2017 Jun 19;17(1):418. doi: 10.1186/s12913-017-2360-7.
While there have been efforts to develop frameworks to guide healthcare priority setting; there has been limited focus on evaluation frameworks. Moreover, while the few frameworks identify quality indicators for successful priority setting, they do not provide the users with strategies to verify these indicators. Kapiriri and Martin (Health Care Anal 18:129-147, 2010) developed a framework for evaluating priority setting in low and middle income countries. This framework provides BOTH parameters for successful priority setting and proposes means of their verification. Before its use in real life contexts, this paper presents results from a validation process of the framework.
The framework validation involved 53 policy makers and priority setting researchers at the global, national and sub-national levels (in Uganda). They were requested to indicate the relative importance of the proposed parameters as well as the feasibility of obtaining the related information. We also pilot tested the proposed means of verification.
Almost all the respondents evaluated all the parameters, including the contextual factors, as 'very important'. However, some respondents at the global level thought 'presence of incentives to comply', 'reduced disagreements', 'increased public understanding,' 'improved institutional accountability' and 'meeting the ministry of health objectives', which could be a reflection of their levels of decision making. All the proposed means of verification were assessed as feasible with the exception of meeting observations which would require an insider. These findings results were consistent with those obtained from the pilot testing.
These findings are relevant to policy makers and researchers involved in priority setting in low and middle income countries. To the best of our knowledge, this is one of the few initiatives that has involved potential users of a framework (at the global and in a Low Income Country) in its validation. The favorable validation of all the parameters at the national and sub-national levels implies that the framework has potential usefulness at those levels, as is. The parameters that were disputed at the global level necessitate further discussion when using the framework at that level. The next step is to use the validated framework in evaluating actual priority setting at the different levels.
尽管已经有人努力制定指导医疗保健优先事项设定的框架,但对评估框架的关注却很有限。此外,虽然少数框架确定了成功进行优先事项设定的质量指标,但它们并未为用户提供核实这些指标的策略。卡皮里里和马丁(《卫生保健分析》18:129 - 147,2010年)为评估低收入和中等收入国家的优先事项设定制定了一个框架。该框架既提供了成功进行优先事项设定的参数,又提出了核实这些参数的方法。在将其应用于实际情况之前,本文展示了该框架验证过程的结果。
框架验证涉及全球、国家和次国家层面(乌干达)的53名政策制定者和优先事项设定研究人员。要求他们指出所提议参数的相对重要性以及获取相关信息的可行性。我们还对提议的核实方法进行了试点测试。
几乎所有受访者都将所有参数,包括背景因素,评估为“非常重要”。然而,一些全球层面的受访者认为“存在遵守激励措施”“减少分歧”“增强公众理解”“改善机构问责制”和“实现卫生部目标”这些方面,这可能反映了他们的决策水平。除了需要内部人员参与的会议观察外,所有提议的核实方法都被评估为可行。这些结果与试点测试获得的结果一致。
这些发现与参与低收入和中等收入国家优先事项设定的政策制定者和研究人员相关。据我们所知,这是少数几个让框架的潜在用户(全球和低收入国家层面)参与其验证的举措之一。国家和次国家层面所有参数的良好验证表明该框架在这些层面具有潜在用途。在全球层面使用该框架时,全球层面存在争议的参数需要进一步讨论。下一步是使用经过验证的框架评估不同层面的实际优先事项设定情况。