The 19th July 2021, reviewed the COVID-19 pandemic experiences of the Long-Term Care systems in France, Italy and Portugal, as well as an international overview from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and can be found here. LTC Covid  is managed and funded by the International Long-term Care Policy Network (ILPN) and Care Policy and Evaluation Centre (CPEC) at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).

Oscar Brito Fernandes was invited to present the nursing home covid-19 preparedness study to the LTC Covid audience. His presentation is the ninth webinar, follow this link to watch his presentation.

The research leading to this presentation is also published now (click the title to read): 

Brito Fernandes Ó, Lobo Julião P, Klazinga N, Kringos D, Marques N. COVID-19 Preparedness and Perceived Safety in Nursing Homes in Southern Portugal: A Cross-Sectional Survey-Based Study in the Initial Phases of the PandemicInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(15):7983. 

 

New study launching March 2021: COVID-19 dashboards from the perspective of their developers

The HealthPros network, in collaboration with the WHO Regional Office for Europe, have prepared a new study related to public, web-based COVID-19 dashboards. The study explores the perspective of the organizations behind the dashboards in order to describe the development process and identify the facilitating and hindering factors involved. To do so, we will be conducting one-on-one interviews with dashboard teams and organise a joint workshop of dashboard developers to network and directly exchange experiences and lessons learned.

Target COVID-19 dashboards

We have put focus on COVID-19 dashboards that meet the following criteria: reporting of key performance indicators related to COVID-19; use of some form of visualization (tables, maps, graphs); availability in an online, web-based format; reporting on COVID-19 in the scope of the 53 countries of the WHO European Region at the national level; and developed by a government or appointed public authority with the responsibility to report pandemic-related information.

Are you a member of a COVID-19 dashboard team?

The target key informants include individuals in senior strategic, operational, analytical or technical positions related to the development and running of COVID-19 dashboards in the WHO European Region. Informants ideally have involvement with the dashboard from its inception and have had oversight or influence over decisions related to its aim, content, data sources, display and dissemination.

If you are a member of a COVID-19 dashboard team and are interested to participate in this study, please get in touch by sending an email to Damir Ivankovic (d.ivankovic[at]amsterdamumc.nl) and Erica Barbazza (e.s.barbazza[at]amsterdamumc.nl). Our team can provide further details and background materials on this study.

You can also join a webinar on Tuesday March 30th 12:00–13:00 CET where this study will be presented in further detail by the study team. The webinar will be in English and Russian. All are welcome to attend.

To join, register here

 

Other HealthPros COVID-19 published studies

Managing COVID-19 within and across health systems: Why we need performance intelligence to coordinate a global response (DOI: 10.1186/s12961-020-00593-x)

Features Constituting Actionable COVID-19 Dashboards: Descriptive Assessment and Expert Appraisal of 158 Public Web-Based COVID-19 Dashboards

Early lessons from COVID-19 response and shifts in authority: public trust, policy legitimacy and political inclusion (DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckaa181)

‘Immersion Community’-based approach to PhD training

The Training Network for Healthcare Performance Intelligence Professionals (HealthPros) fulfils the need to optimise the use of available healthcare data, supporting healthcare systems in achieving the Triple Aim related performance goals (achieving a balance between improving the health of populations, delivering quality care for individuals, and containing costs) by building capacity and skills of Healthcare Performance Intelligence Professionals. This will be done through the implementation of an ‘Immersion Community’-based approach to PhD training.

Thirteen HealthPros Fellows are working on a coherent set of individual research projects aimed at obtaining a PhD degree divided in three R&D work packages (see WPs in figure). Together, these projects will cover all layers of the Healthcare Performance Intelligence pyramid (see steps 1-3 in figure).

 

                                                           Aims picture

In addition, the Fellows will benefit from a unique concept of the HealthPros Network: the Immersion Community. The HealthPros Consortium maintains close ties to a wide range of organizations in academia, industry, pharma, governance, and purchasing (social health insurance, regional government) that will regularly interact with the Fellows, providing a direct training-to-job-market approach.

Research projects on Healthcare Performance Measurement

Five HealthPros Fellows work on PhD projects related to healthcare performance measurement optimizing the use of available registry and administrative data and applying
statistical models to provide actionable input to HC performance management (Work Package 1; step 1 of the pyramid in the figure). Healthcare data from administrative databases, registries, surveys, etc. will be used to provide a meaningful platform of health information through reliable, valid, and relevant indicators and metrics.

Projects on Healthcare Performance Governance Mechanisms

Four HealthPros Fellows work on PhD projects to translate performance intelligence into value-creating healthcare governance mechanisms (Work Package 2; step 2 of the pyramid in the figure). Data will be integrated using different forms and governance mechanisms (i.e. target setting, health services contracting, health financing, public reporting) that will allow brokering solutions towards their end-users (i.e. citizens, health professionals, and decision-makers). This process will require multiple disciplinary expertise embedded in the consortium through members active in social sciences, public administration, health economics, health services research, political science, health policy and management, biostatistics, clinical epidemiology, medicine, improvement science and information science.

Projects on the Utilization of Healthcare Performance Intelligence

Four HealthPros Fellows work on PhDs aimed to impact the actual use of performance intelligence by different end-users. ESRs will have unique healthcare data access (Work Package 3; step 3 of the pyramid in the figire). HealthPros will apply a practice oriented approach by testing the practical use of health care performance intelligence by multiple end-users across countries. The projects will apply different conceptual approaches, governance mechanisms and tools introduced in steps 1-2 of the pyramid.

The three-step approach is translated in equivalent Work Packages (WPs), where each of HealthPros Fellows’ projects will form the basis of the research and methodology (see figure).

 

HealthPros currently has 11 Fellows.

Below you will find a  link to a short description of each (PhD) research project. Now the project is almost coming to an end, we asked all fellows to prepare a short video explaining their work in HealthPros. You will also find the links to those video's below.

 

  MG 4047 Barbazza 2  PinarKara healthprosp  Mekha Ann Mathew    Nicolas

 ESR 1- Erica Barbazza, MSc, BHSc

Short project description

Short video on findings

ESR 3- Pinar Kara, MSc

Short project description

Short video on findings

ESR 4- Mekha Mathews  

Short project description

Short video on findings

 

ESR 5- Nicolas Larrain, MBA, MSc

Short project description

Short video on findings

 Kendall Gilmore 400x382  photo damir ivankovic  ESR8 scarBritoFernandes2    Sophie healthpros

ESR 6- Kendall Jamieson Gilmore, MSc

Short project description

Short video on findings

ESR 7- Damir Ivankovic, MD, MBA

Short project description

Short video on findings

ESR 8- Óscar Brito Fernandes, M.Sc., M.Ed.

Short project description

Short video on findings

 

ESR 10-Sophie Wang, MSc

Short project description

Short video on findings

 BMeza2  Claire Wilmington  Mircha   BOS 2 

ESR 11-Bernardo Meza-Torres MSc.

Short project description

Short video on findings

ESR 12- Claire Wilmington, MSc

Short project description

Short video on findings

ESR 13- Mircha Poldrugovac, MSc, MD

Short project description

Short video on findings

 

Associated fellow- Véronique Bos, BSc MA

Short project description

 Short video on findings

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ESR 3- Pinar Kara, MSc

Composite measures for quality of health care for patients with chronic conditions: are we comparing apples and pears?

Host:

Prof. J. Mainz / Prof. S.P. Johnsen

Centre of Clinical Health Services Research

Aalborg Psychiatric Hospital – Aalborg University Hospital

Denmark

Duration: 36 months

Pinar will: 1) Develop and evaluate composite measures for quality of care of patients with stroke, heart failure and chronic obstructive lung disease. 2) Implement selected composite measures in clinical practice.

Background

Insight into the performance of a healthcare system requires scientifically sound conceptual frameworks (e.g. the Dutch Healthcare Performance Report by the RIVM or the Canadian Health System Performance framework by CIHI). The use of these frameworks depends on their use and relevance to resolve contemporary health policy challenges. Frameworks are often populated with large amounts of indicators and policy makers are asking for smaller numbers of composite measures that are valid and reliable to support their decision making. The project will focus on the validity, reliability and actionability of compound indicators on the quality of health care for patients with chronic conditions.

Approach 

The PhD candidate will develop and evaluate composite measures of the quality of care for patients with stroke, heart failure and chronic obstructive lung disease, and implement selected composite measures for clinical quality improvement to reach better outcomes for chronically ill patients. Different composite measures of quality of care will be computed and the effect of using different composite measures on hospital rankings will be determined. Qualitative and quantitative data will be used from Danish health care registries, that can be linked unambiguously using the unique 10-digit civil registration number, which all Danish citizens receive upon birth or immigration. The researcher will test the -in Denmark- developed and validated composite measures in the Italian regional healthcare system.

 

ESR 1- Erica Barbazza, MSc, BHSc

Transferability of actionable performance indicators: Making performance indicators work

 

Short video on the findings during HealthPros

 

Host:

Prof. Dr. Niek Klazinga / Dr. Dionne Kringos

Academic Medical Centre of the University of Amsterdam

Department of Public Health

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

www.amc.nl

Duration: 48 months

Erica will develop state of the art methods to enhance fitness for use of healthcare performance indicators for different purposes.

Background

Insight into the performance of a healthcare system as a whole or specific parts, such as the primary care system, requires scientifically sound conceptual frameworks (e.g. the Dutch Healthcare Performance Report by the RIVM or the Canadian Health System Performance framework by CIHI). The use of indicators populating these frameworks depends on their practical use and relevance to resolve contemporary health policy challenges. Good-quality studies are needed to improve the balance of current indicator sets to optimize use and realization of impact. Recent studies found that quality indicators on patient safety, medication prescribing, mental healthcare and patient experiences are reported least often in national performance frameworks. Similarly, it is advocated to develop (patient reported) outcome measures relevant to patients, clinicians, system managers and policy makers. Factors potentially hampering the shift from performance measurement towards performance management include the administrative burden and overall costs, data linkage problems, privacy issues, and a lack of skills to translate healthcare services data into actionable knowledge. Apart from reliability and validity, actionability is a crucial component for indicators to make them work.

Approach 

The PhD candidate will identify the characteristics of healthcare performance indicators used in Europe and Canada as well as the conditions in which they are used (e.g. specific purposes for healthcare performance measurement) and factors that are likely to contribute to their actionability and the extent this has led to measurable results for balancing between improving the health of populations, delivering quality care for individuals, and containing costs. Hence emphasis lies on the (international) transferability of actionable indicators for various purposes as part of health system performance.

 

 ESR 4- Mekha Mathews

Optimising the use of routine health databases for personalised risk profiling stimulating patient engagement

Host:

Prof Simon de Lusignan/Prof. Fabrizio Carinci

University of Surrey

Guildford, UK

Duration: 36 months

The studies will explore feasibility and expandability of a risk profiling model using data available from the existing national databases for improved person-centred care and direct patient activation. The results will help identifying the optimal data granularity required to exchange information and use the method in a valid and secure way internationally.

Background

Person-centred care implies making the right decisions using the best available evidence in the context of the individual subject. Modern health care is reshaping the role of the physician at the crossroads of a complex framework of rapid technological development and higher expectations of individuals, but multiple sources do not necessarily translate into effective decisions. Risk profiling can help both the physician and the patient agreeing informed directions and trigger the right processes for patient-centred care. The use of routine health databases, albeit promising, has been relatively limited in real world conditions.

This project will allow identifying new standards for risk profiling, using large scale clinical databases to take into account different populations within and across countries for potential everyday use.

Approach

A series of studies will investigate the potential of large routine health databases for different types of personalised risk profiling of patients to be used routinely for shared-decision making in a clinical setting. Risk profile algorithms will build on statistical models taking into account multiple characteristics collected from the existing databases, including clinical parameters (e.g. vascular complications of lower extremities in diabetes), behavioral factors (e.g. compliance to treatment and patient activation) and socioeconomic conditions. The PhD candidate will benefit from direct access to relevant databases managed by established networks e.g. the RCGP database, the nationwide Scottish database (SCI-FI), the Danish quality registries and diabetes-related data sources managed by centres of the EUBIROD network and OptiMedis.

 

Subcategories