Jaffe
DH, Shmueli A, Ben-Yehuda A, Paltiel O, Calderon R,
Cohen AD, Matz E, Rosenblum
JK, Wilf-Miron R, Manor O. Community Healthcare in Israel: Quality
indicators 2007-2009. Israel Journal of Health Policy Research
2011;1:3. doi:10.1186/2045-4015-1-3.
ABSTRACT
Background The
National Program for Quality Indicators in Community Healthcare in Israel
(QICH) was developed to provide policy makers and consumers with information on
the quality of community healthcare in Israel. In what follows we present
the most recent results of the QICH indicator set for 2009 and an examination
of changes that have occurred since 2007.
Methods Data
for 28 quality indicators were collected from all four health plans in Israel
for the years 2007-2009. The QICH indicator set examined six areas of
healthcare: asthma, cancer screening, cardiovascular health, child health,
diabetes and immunizations for older adults.
Results
Dramatic increases in the documentation of anthropometric measures were
observed over the measurement period. Documentation of BMI for adolescents and
adults increased by 30 percentage points, reaching rates of 61% and 70%,
respectively, in 2009. Modest increases (3%-7%) over time were observed for
other primary prevention quality measures including immunizations for older
adults, cancer screening, anemia screening for young children, and
documentation of cardiovascular risks. Overall, rates of recommended care for
chronic diseases (asthma, cardiovascular disease and diabetes) increased over
time. Changes in rates of quality care
for diabetes were varied over the measurement period.
Conclusions The
overall quality of community healthcare in Israel has improved over the past
three years. Future research should focus
on the adherence to quality indicators in population subgroups and compare the
QICH data with those in other countries. In addition, one of the next steps in
assessing and further improving healthcare quality in Israel is to relate these
process and performance indicators to health outcomes.
Chassin MR. Quality of Care: How Good is Good
Enough? Israel
Journal of Health Policy Research 2011;1:4 doi:10.1186/2045-4015-1-4
ABSTRACT
Israel has made
impressive progress in improving performance on key measures of the quality of
health care in the community in recent years. These achievements are all the
more notable given Israel's modest overall spending on health care and because
they have accrued to virtually the entire population of the country. Health care
systems in most developed nations around the world find themselves in a similar
position today with respect to health care quality. Despite significantly
increased improvement efforts over the past decade, routine safety processes,
such as hand hygiene and medication administration, fail routinely at rates of
30% to 50%. People with chronic diseases experience preventable episodes of
acute illness that require hospitalization due to medication mix-ups and other
failures of outpatient management. Patients continue to be harmed by
preventable adverse events, such as surgery on the wrong part of the body and
fires in operating theaters. Health care around the
world is not nearly as safe as other industries, such as commercial aviation,
that have mastered highly effective ways to manage serious hazards. Health care
organizations will have to undertake three interrelated changes to get
substantially closer to the superlative safety records of other industries:
leadership commitment to zero major quality failures, widespread implementation
of highly effective process improvement methods, and the adoption of all facets
of a culture of safety. Each of these changes represents a major challenge to
the way today's health care organizations plan and carry out their daily work.
The Israeli health system is in an enviable position to implement these
changes. Universal health insurance coverage, the enrolment of the entire
population in a small number of health plans, and the widespread use of
electronic health records provide advantages available to few other countries.
Achieving and sustaining levels of safety comparable to, say, commercial
aviation will be a long journey for health care--one we should begin promptly. (This
is a commentary on http://www.ijhpr.org/content/1/1/3/)
Rosen
B, Porath A, Pawlson LG, Chassin MR, Benbassat. Adherence to standards of care by health maintenance organizations
in Israel and the USA. International
Journal of Quality in Health Care 2011;23(1):15-25.
ABSTRACT
Background The health-care
systems in the USA and Israel differ in organization, financing and expenditure
levels. However, managed care organizations play an important role in both
countries, and a comparison of the performance of their community-based health plans could inform policymakers
about ways to improve the quality of care.
Objectives To compare the adherence to
standards of care in Israel and in the USA.
Study design An observational study comparing
trends in performance using data from reports of the National Quality Measures
Program in Israel and of the National Committee for Quality Assurance in the
USA.
Results Differences in specifications
preclude a comparison between most measures in the two reports. However, the
comparison of 11 similar measures in the 2007 reports indicates that
performance was higher in the USA by 10 or more percentage points on four
measures (flu immunization, medication for asthma, screening for colorectal
cancer and monitoring for diabetic nephropathy). Performance was higher in
Israel on three measures in patients with diabetes (blood pressure, lowdensity lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and glycemic
control), and similar on the remaining four measures. Between 2005 and 2007,
quality of care improved in both countries. However, improvement was slower in
the USA than in Israel.
Conclusions. In comparison with the USA,
Israel achieves comparable health maintenance organization (HMO) quality on
several primary care indicators and more rapid quality improvement, despite its
substantially lower level of expenditure. Considering the differences between
the two countries in settings and populations, further research is needed to
assess the causes, generalizability and policy implications of these findings.
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