Kenny Katherine, Broom Alex, Peterie Michelle, Bennett Juliet, Broom Jennifer
Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies, The School of Social and Political Sciences, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies, School of Social and Political Sciences, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, and Charles Perkins Centre, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Qual Health Res. 2025 Aug;35(9):980-991. doi: 10.1177/10497323241271915. Epub 2024 Oct 23.
The problem of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is often viewed through biomedical and/or behavioral lenses, with the underlying economic principles and "headwinds" shaping resistance less visible. In this paper, we focus on how healthcare funding models structure the ways AMR is perceived and addressed as an institutional priority. Specifically, we explore how activity-based funding reflects and operationalizes ingrained assumptions about what is valuable and/or worthwhile within the organizational ecology of the hospital. Drawing on interviews with 36 executives from several hospital clinical care settings across two Australian states, we illuminate the ways the activity-based funding paradigm works against efforts to combat AMR. Concerningly, we further observe how activity-based funding models can inadvertently position rising rates of resistance as a benefit-at least in the short term-as the new and intensified interventions required to address resistant infections require more "activity" and thus deliver higher reimbursement at the level of annualized budgets. In failing to recognize the (social and economic) value of activity, activity-based funding risks contributing to AMR, rather than working to resolve it.
抗菌素耐药性(AMR)问题通常是从生物医学和/或行为角度来看待的,而影响耐药性的潜在经济原则和“逆风”则不太明显。在本文中,我们关注医疗保健资金模式如何构建将AMR视为机构优先事项并加以应对的方式。具体而言,我们探讨基于活动的资金如何反映并实施关于医院组织生态中哪些是有价值的和/或值得做的根深蒂固的假设。通过对澳大利亚两个州多家医院临床护理机构的36位管理人员进行访谈,我们阐明了基于活动的资金模式如何不利于抗击AMR的努力。令人担忧的是,我们进一步观察到基于活动的资金模式如何可能无意中将耐药率上升视为一种益处——至少在短期内是这样——因为应对耐药感染所需的新的强化干预措施需要更多的“活动”,从而在年度预算层面带来更高的报销额。由于没有认识到活动的(社会和经济)价值,基于活动的资金有可能助长AMR,而不是致力于解决它。