Vélez Claudia-Marcela, Kapiriri Lydia, Goold Susan, Danis Marion, Williams Iestyn, Aguilera Bernardo, Essue Beverley M, Nouvet Elysee
Department of Health, Aging & Society, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, 1280 Main Street West, Kenneth Taylor Hall Room 226, Postal code L8S 4M4 and Faculty of Medicine, University of Antioquia, Cra 51d #62-29, Medellín, Antioquia, Colombia.
Department of Health, Aging & Society, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Kenneth Taylor Hall Room 226, Postal code L8S 4M4, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Health Policy Open. 2024 Jul 19;7:100125. doi: 10.1016/j.hpopen.2024.100125. eCollection 2024 Dec 15.
The COVID-19 pandemic forced governments across the world to consider how to prioritize resource allocation. Most countries produced pandemic preparedness plans that guide and coordinate healthcare, including how to allocate scarce resources such as ventilators, human resources, and therapeutics. The objective of this study was to compare and contrast the extent to which established parameters for effective priority setting (PS) were incorporated into COVID-19 pandemic response planning in several countries around the world.
We used the Kapriri and Martin framework for effective priority setting and performed a quantitative descriptive analysis to explore whether and how countries' type of health system, political, and economic contexts impacted the inclusion of those parameters in their COVID-19 pandemic plans. We analyzed 86 country plans across six regions of the World Health Organization.
The countries sampled represent 40% of nations in AFRO, 54.5% of EMRO, 45% of EURO, 46% of PAHO, 64% of SEARO, and 41% of WPRO. They also represent 39% of all HICs in the world, 39% of Upper-Middle, 54% of Lower-Middle, and 48% of LICs. No pattern in attention to parameters of PS emerged by WHO region or country income levels. The parameters: evidence of political will, stakeholder participation, and use of scientific evidence/ adoption of WHO recommendations were each found in over 80% of plans. We identified a description of a specific PS process in 7% of the plans; explicit criteria for PS in 36.5%; inclusion of publicity strategies in 65%; mention of mechanisms for appealing decisions or implementing procedures to improve internal accountability and reduce corruption in 20%; explicit reference to public values in 15%; and a description of means for enhancing compliance with the decisions in 5%.
The findings provide a basis for policymakers to reflect on their prioritization plans and identify areas that need to be strengthened. Overall, there is little consideration for explicit prioritization processes and tools and restricted attention to equity considerations; this may be a starting point for policymakers interested in improving future preparedness and response planning. Although the study focused on the COVID-19 pandemic, priority setting remains one of the policymakers' most prominent challenges. Policymakers should consider integrating systematic priority setting in their routine decision-making processes.
新冠疫情迫使世界各国政府思考如何对资源分配进行优先排序。大多数国家制定了大流行防范计划,以指导和协调医疗保健工作,包括如何分配呼吸机、人力资源和治疗药物等稀缺资源。本研究的目的是比较和对比有效确定优先事项(PS)的既定参数在世界上几个国家的新冠疫情应对规划中的纳入程度。
我们使用了有效确定优先事项的卡普里里和马丁框架,并进行了定量描述性分析,以探讨各国的卫生系统类型、政治和经济背景是否以及如何影响这些参数在其新冠疫情计划中的纳入情况。我们分析了世界卫生组织六个区域的86个国家计划。
抽样国家占非洲区域办事处国家的40%、东地中海区域办事处国家的54.5%、欧洲区域办事处国家的45%、泛美卫生组织国家的46%、东南亚区域办事处国家的64%和西太平洋区域办事处国家的41%。它们还占世界所有高收入国家的39%、中高收入国家的39%、中低收入国家的54%和低收入国家的48%。按世界卫生组织区域或国家收入水平划分,在对确定优先事项参数的关注方面未呈现出模式。参数:政治意愿的证据、利益相关者的参与以及科学证据的使用/对世界卫生组织建议的采纳,在超过80%的计划中均有体现。我们在7%的计划中发现了对特定确定优先事项过程的描述;在36.5%的计划中有确定优先事项的明确标准;在65%的计划中有宣传策略的纳入;在20%的计划中提到了对决策提出上诉或实施程序以提高内部问责制和减少腐败的机制;在15%的计划中有对公共价值观的明确提及;在5%的计划中有对加强对决策遵守情况的手段的描述。
研究结果为政策制定者反思其优先排序计划并确定需要加强的领域提供了依据。总体而言,对明确的优先排序过程和工具考虑甚少,对公平性考虑的关注有限;这可能是对改善未来防范和应对规划感兴趣的政策制定者的一个起点。尽管该研究聚焦于新冠疫情,但确定优先事项仍然是政策制定者最突出的挑战之一。政策制定者应考虑将系统的优先事项确定纳入其日常决策过程。