RH - week 5 Flashcards

1
Q

capacity

A

country-less assessment for prioritization on immunization

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2
Q

CAPACITI decision- support tool

A
  • for prioritisation
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2
Q

CAPACITI decision- support tool

A
  • for prioritization among multiple immunization products, services or strategies
  • incorporates input from multiple stakeholders, evidence across disciplines, operational and socio-ethical aspects, and data uncertainty
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3
Q

steps in the tool

A
  1. decision question
  2. criteria for decision- making
  3. evidence assessment
  4. appraisal
  5. recommendation
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4
Q

evidence assessment

A
  • evidence collection
  • evidence statements
  • performance matrix
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5
Q

appraisal

A
  • comparison by criterion
  • comparison across criteria
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6
Q

UHC benefit package of Pakistan: principles and approach
Guiding Principles of Benefit Package Design
UHC Benefit Package design should be:

A
  • Impartial, democratic, inclusive and based on national values and clearly defined criteria
  • Open and transparent in all steps of the process and decisions
  • Trade-offs should be clearly data driven and evidence-based
  • Progressing from data to dialogue to decision
  • Linked to robust financing mechanisms and effective service delivery mechanisms 9
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7
Q

steps for the development of UHC (universal health coverage) benefit package

A

A: installing an advisory committee
B: defining decision criteria
C: selecting services
D1: assessment
D2: Appraisal
E: communication and appeal
F: monitoring and evaluation

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8
Q

stages for the development of UHC benefit package (D1)

A
  • Selection & description of interventions at all five platforms through a consultative process completed – 193 interventions
  • Describe all activities and inputs – workforce, equipment, medicines, diagnostics etc.
  • Unit costs estimated – bottom-up normative costing
  • Extensive review of ICERs for interventions – based on global, regional, local best evidence
  • Optimization of interventions based on – cost-effectiveness, DALYs averted, targeted population, budgetary impact – ‘Hiptool’
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9
Q

feasibility

A

financial risk protection

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10
Q

equity

A

social and economic impact

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11
Q

Health losses per specialty reflect:

A
  • Regular number of surgeries
  • Number of elective (>1 month possible delay) surgeries
  • Number of delayed surgeries
  • QALY gains of the surgeries
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12
Q

Conclusion: delay of elective procedures not without consequences

A
  • Urgency classification was meant to be a temporary tool. Not expected to be applied for 2 years or even longer.
  • Delays of elective surgeries also have negative health consequences: 320 thousand QALYs have not been delivered.
  • This stresses the importance of continuing to deliver regular care as much as possible, even in times of scarcity.
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13
Q

Health losses can be constrained in future pandemics by:

A
  • aiming for high volumes: search for ways to continue as many surgeries as possible
    o dination in/between regions, with independent treatment centers (ZBCs), and with foreign hospitals
  • aiming for health effects:
    o Prioritize surgeries with the highest QALY gains
    o Reassess possible prioritizations of elective surgeries
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14
Q

Expert opinion
Disadvantages:

A
  • Level of agreement on prioritization between experts is low (MacCormick AD, Parry BR. Med Decis Making 2006)
  • Prioritization across disciplines is complicated by the high degree of specialization in modern medicine.
  • Most importantly, this approach does not systematically optimize population health
  • Not clear which values are considered à not transparent
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15
Q

Ethical perspective
Four criteria to allocate scarce resources:

A

1) Maximize the benefits produced by scare resources
2) Treat people equally
3) Promote and reward instrumental values
4) Give priority to the worst-off (the sickest).