Penn State University.
Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai.
Milbank Q. 2023 Mar;101(1):74-125. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12609. Epub 2023 Mar 15.
Policy Points Current pay-for-performance and other payment policies ignore hospital transfers for emergency conditions, which may exacerbate disparities. No conceptual framework currently exists that offers a patient-centered, population-based perspective for the structure of hospital transfer networks. The hospital transfer network equity-quality framework highlights the external and internal factors that determine the structure of hospital transfer networks, including structural inequity and racism.
Emergency care includes two key components: initial stabilization and transfer to a higher level of care. Significant work has focused on ensuring that local facilities can stabilize patients. However, less is understood about transfers for definitive care. To better understand how transfer network structure impacts population health and equity in emergency care, we proposea conceptual framework, the hospital transfer network equity-quality model (NET-EQUITY). NET-EQUITY can help optimize population outcomes, decrease disparities, and enhance planning by supporting a framework for understanding emergency department transfers.
To develop the NET-EQUITY framework, we synthesized work on health systems and quality of health care (Donabedian, the Institute of Medicine, Ferlie, and Shortell) and the research framework of the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities with legal and empirical research.
The central thesis of our framework is that the structure of hospital transfer networks influences patient outcomes, as defined by the Institute of Medicine, which includes equity. The structure of hospital transfer networks is shaped by internal and external factors. The four main external factors are the regulatory, economic environment, provider, and sociocultural and physical/built environment. These environments all implicate issues of equity that are important to understand to foster an equitable population-based system of emergency care. The framework highlights external and internal factors that determine the structure of hospital transfer networks, including structural racism and inequity.
The NET-EQUITY framework provides a patient-centered, equity-focused framework for understanding the health of populations and how the structure of hospital transfer networks can influence the quality of care that patients receive.
目的:当前的按绩效付费和其他支付政策忽略了紧急情况下的医院转院,这可能会加剧差异。目前还没有一个概念框架提供一个以患者为中心、基于人群的视角来构建医院转院网络的结构。医院转院网络公平性-质量框架突出了决定医院转院网络结构的外部和内部因素,包括结构性不平等和种族主义。
背景:急诊护理包括两个关键组成部分:初步稳定和转至更高水平的护理。大量工作集中在确保当地设施能够稳定患者。然而,对于明确的护理转院了解较少。为了更好地了解转院网络结构如何影响急诊护理的人口健康和公平性,我们提出了一个概念框架,即医院转院网络公平性-质量模型(NET-EQUITY)。NET-EQUITY 可以通过支持理解急诊转院的框架来帮助优化人群结果、减少差异并增强规划。
方法:为了开发 NET-EQUITY 框架,我们综合了健康系统和医疗质量方面的工作(Donabedian、美国医学研究所、Ferlie 和 Shortell)以及国家少数民族健康和健康差异研究所的研究框架和法律及实证研究。
发现:我们框架的核心论点是,医院转院网络的结构影响患者的结局,正如美国医学研究所定义的那样,这包括公平性。医院转院网络的结构是由内部和外部因素塑造的。四个主要的外部因素是监管、经济环境、提供者以及社会文化和物理/建筑环境。这些环境都涉及到公平性问题,这些问题对于理解促进基于人群的公平急诊护理系统至关重要。该框架突出了决定医院转院网络结构的外部和内部因素,包括结构性种族主义和不平等。
结论:NET-EQUITY 框架为理解人群的健康以及医院转院网络的结构如何影响患者接受的护理质量提供了一个以患者为中心、注重公平性的框架。