Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
DeGroote School of Business, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON, L8S4M4, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 May 23;22(1):690. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-08032-z.
Health systems are increasingly implementing policy-driven programs to incentivize performance using contracts, scorecards, rankings, rewards, and penalties. Studies of these "Performance Management" (PM) programs have identified unintended negative consequences. However, no single comprehensive typology of the negative and positive unintended consequences of PM in healthcare exists and most studies of unintended consequences were conducted in England or the United States. The aims of this study were: (1) To develop a comprehensive typology of unintended consequences of PM in healthcare, and (2) To describe multiple stakeholder perspectives of the unintended consequences of PM in cancer and renal care in Ontario, Canada.
We conducted a rapid review of unintended consequences of PM in healthcare (n = 41 papers) to develop a typology of unintended consequences. We then conducted a secondary analysis of data from a qualitative study involving semi-structured interviews with 147 participants involved with or impacted by a PM system used to oversee 40 care delivery networks in Ontario, Canada. Participants included administrators and clinical leads from the networks and the government agency managing the PM system. We undertook a hybrid inductive and deductive coding approach using the typology we developed from the rapid review.
We present a comprehensive typology of 48 negative and positive unintended consequences of PM in healthcare, including five novel unintended consequences not previously identified or well-described in the literature. The typology is organized into two broad categories: unintended consequences on (1) organizations and providers and on (2) patients and patient care. The most common unintended consequences of PM identified in the literature were measure fixation, tunnel vision, and misrepresentation or gaming, while those most prominent in the qualitative data were administrative burden, insensitivity, reduced morale, and systemic dysfunction. We also found that unintended consequences of PM are often mutually reinforcing.
Our comprehensive typology provides a common language for discourse on unintended consequences and supports systematic, comparable analyses of unintended consequences across PM regimes and healthcare systems. Healthcare policymakers and managers can use the results of this study to inform the (re-)design and implementation of evidence-informed PM programs.
医疗系统越来越多地实施政策驱动的计划,通过合同、记分卡、排名、奖励和惩罚来激励绩效。这些“绩效管理”(PM)计划的研究已经确定了意想不到的负面影响。然而,目前还没有一个关于医疗保健中 PM 的负面和正面意外后果的综合分类,并且大多数关于意外后果的研究都是在英国或美国进行的。本研究的目的是:(1)制定一个医疗保健中 PM 意外后果的综合分类,(2)描述加拿大安大略省癌症和肾脏护理中 PM 意外后果的多个利益相关者观点。
我们对医疗保健中 PM 的意外后果(n=41 篇论文)进行了快速审查,以制定一个意外后果分类。然后,我们对一项定性研究的数据进行了二次分析,该研究涉及对 147 名参与或受 PM 系统监督的 40 个护理提供网络的参与者进行半结构化访谈,参与者包括网络的管理人员和临床负责人以及管理 PM 系统的政府机构。我们使用从快速审查中开发的分类法,采用了混合归纳和演绎的编码方法。
我们提出了一个医疗保健中 PM 的 48 个负面和正面意外后果的综合分类,包括五个以前在文献中没有发现或描述得很好的新的意外后果。该分类分为两类:对(1)组织和提供者和(2)患者和患者护理的意外后果。文献中确定的 PM 最常见的意外后果是衡量固定、管窥和错误表示或游戏,而定性数据中最突出的是行政负担、不敏感、士气低落和系统功能障碍。我们还发现,PM 的意外后果往往是相互加强的。
我们的综合分类为关于意外后果的讨论提供了一种共同的语言,并支持对不同 PM 制度和医疗保健系统的意外后果进行系统、可比的分析。医疗保健政策制定者和管理者可以使用本研究的结果来为基于证据的 PM 计划的(重新)设计和实施提供信息。