4 resultados para Health planning - Brazil
em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain
Resumo:
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the evolutionof health care expenditure in Spain during the period 1980-1997, andhenceforth to comment on the cost containment measures put forwardto control its growth. The paper is divided into three separatesections. The first offers a brief description of the Spanish HealthCare System, with emphasis placed on the issue of expenditure controland health planning targets. The second part outlines a set of costcontainment measures that has accompanied the process of extendinguniversal health care coverage which occurred during the mentionedperiod and which has helped keep public expenditure under control.Finally, the third part describes some of the more recent proposalsfor reform of the Spanish Health Care Sector.
Resumo:
Background: Hospitals in countries with public health systems have recently adopted organizational changes to improve efficiency and resource allocation, and reducing inappropriate hospitalizations has been established as an important goal. AIMS: Our goal was to describe the functioning of a Quick Diagnosis Unit in a Spanish public university hospital after evaluating 1,000 consecutive patients. We also aimed to ascertain the degree of satisfaction among Quick Diagnosis Unit patients and the costs of the model compared to conventional hospitalization practices. DESIGN: Observational, descriptive study. METHODS: Our sample comprised 1,000 patients evaluated between November 2008 and January 2010 in the Quick Diagnosis Unit of a tertiary university public hospital in Barcelona. Included patients were those who had potentially severe diseases and would normally require hospital admission for diagnosis but whose general condition allowed outpatient treatment. We analyzed several variables, including time to diagnosis, final diagnoses and hospitalizations avoided, and we also investigated the mean cost (as compared to conventional hospitalization) and the patients' satisfaction. RESULTS: In 88% of cases, the reasons for consultation were anemia, anorexia-cachexia syndrome, febrile syndrome, adenopathies, abdominal pain, chronic diarrhea and lung abnormalities. The most frequent diagnoses were cancer (18.8%; mainly colon cancer and lymphoma) and Iron-deficiency anemia (18%). The mean time to diagnosis was 9.2 days (range 1 to 19 days). An estimated 12.5 admissions/day in a one-year period (in the internal medicine department) were avoided. In a subgroup analysis, the mean cost per process (admission-discharge) for a conventional hospitalization was 3,416.13 Euros, while it was 735.65 Euros in the Quick Diagnosis Unit. Patients expressed a high degree of satisfaction with Quick Diagnosis Unit care. CONCLUSIONS: Quick Diagnosis Units represent a useful and cost-saving model for the diagnostic study of patients with potentially severe diseases. Future randomized study designs involving comparisons between controls and intervention groups would help elucidate the usefulness of Quick Diagnosis Units as an alternative to conventional hospitalization.
Resumo:
Las llamadas técnicas de planificación sanitaria son reconocidas por su utilidad en el ámbito de los trabajos de grupo y en la realización de estudios. Por ejemplo, el brainstorming es muy utilizado para la detección de problemas en la mejora de la calidad asistencial. El Grupo Nominal se suele aplicar en las situaciones o casos que queremos mejorar basándonos en la reflexión y en el consenso de un grupo de participantes. Por otra parte, la técnica de Delphi permite ver tendencias de futuro, de acuerdo, por ejemplo, con la visión de los profesionales de la salud y los usuarios. El diagrama causa-efecto de Ishikawa puede ayudarnos a delimitar los problemas ante un acontecimiento determinado. A continuación le presentamos una serie de preguntas cuyas respuestas le darán a conocer su nivel de conocimientos sobre estas útiles técnicas.
Resumo:
Este artículo es la segunda parte del publicado en el anterior número de Nursing. Continuamos poniendo de relieve la importancia que tienen las técnicas de planificación para realizar trabajos o proyectos participativos que lleven a la prevención, el análisis y la resolución de problemas, desde la perspectiva de una buena planificación. Como comentábamos en la primera parte, estas técnicas también se utilizan en las metodologías de mejora de la calidad asistencial.