Journal of public health medicine
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The terms 'managed care' and 'disease management' are gaining common usage in the health service but their meaning is not widely understood. Managed care is a generic term describing any health care system that integrates the financing and delivery of medical care. Its growth in the United States has been driven by pressure to control costs, and there is circumstantial evidence that costs are slowing as a result of better management of resources. ⋯ This is poorly developed in the NHS, so that the attention of commercial organizations has been attracted. However, concern has been expressed about the implications of commercial involvement: the fragmentation of general medical services; effect of for-profit status; and use of patient-based data. Recent policy developments could allow disease management to develop within the NHS.
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J Public Health Med · Jun 1997
ReviewOutcome measures in palliative care for advanced cancer patients: a review.
Information generated using outcome measures to measure the effectiveness of palliative care interventions is potentially invaluable. Depending on the measurement tool employed the results can be used to monitor clinical care, carry out comparative research, provide audit data or inform purchasing decisions. However, the data collected can only ever be as good as the method used to obtain them. ⋯ The criteria for the inclusion and assessment of measures were a measure assessing more than one domain and a target population of advanced disease or palliative care Forty-one measures were identified, 12 of which satisfied the inclusion criteria. These contained between five and 56 items and covered aspects of physical, psychological and spiritual domains. Each measure meets some but not all of the objectives of measurement in palliative care, and fulfils some but not all of our criteria for validity, reliability, responsiveness and appropriateness.
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Health Authorities seeking to make appropriate investments in health care require information about the nature of the burden of disease in their populations. The World Bank instrument called DALY-Disability Adjusted Life Year-has been used in the South and West Region to measure this burden. ⋯ DALYs can be calculated using UK data, and, with an appreciation of the theoretical issues which surround the calculations, can be used to describe the burden of disease in a population. Although designed to assist investment decisions in developing countries, the DALY is likely to be valuable in established market economies.
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Each of the 15 Health Boards in Scotland maintains a computer file of its residents who are registered with a general practitioner; this is known as the Community Health Index or CHI. The CHI allows a variety of demographic data and indicators of health to be analysed on either a geographic or general practice base, or both simultaneously. The considerable potential of the CHI as a public health tool may be of interest to health authorities outside Scotland which are developing wider uses for their own family practitioner registers.
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This study aimed to examine the extent to which patients make appropriate use of Accident and Emergency and Minor Injury Unit services. The outcomes used included the proportion of Minor Injury Unit patients referred to an Accident and Emergency department, comparison between the proportions admitted from patients attending Minor Injury Units and Accident and Emergency departments directly, and the diagnoses and lengths of stay of those requiring admissions from Minor Injury Units. ⋯ The results support the view that patients choose appropriately between attending a Minor Injury Unit or an Accident and Emergency department. However, there was evidence that the availability of an intermediate tier of health care for minor injuries appears likely to result in increased overall workload. This small-scale study leaves unanswered questions in terms of clinical outcomes and the quality of care provided by different facilities.