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Eric Nauenberg, Ph'D'

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Title: Eric Nauenberg, Ph'D'


1
Development of a Taxonomy for Health Care
Decision-Making in Canada
  • Eric Nauenberg, Ph.D.
  • Peter Coyte, Ph.D.
  • Department of Health Policy, Management and
    Evaluation
  • University of Toronto
  • IRPP Conference
  • Careful Consideration Decision-Making in the
    Health Care System
  • November 30th, 2004
  • Funded by the Canadian Health Services Research
    Foundation and the Ontario Ministry of Health and
    Long-Term Care as Regional Co-sponsors RC-0861-06

2
Disclaimer
  • The content herein reflects the observations and
    opinions of the authors and in no way reflect the
    official positions of the Ontario Ministry of
    Health and Long Term Care (MOHLTC), the CHSRF,
    nor any other decision-making body.

3
(No Transcript)
4
Disclaimer 2
  • The content herein may sic shed some light on
    why the foot is connected to the head when it
    comes to decision-making, but the explanation is
    likely to be incomplete.
  • Source Nauenberg E., The Health Economists
    Approach to Anatomy. Forthcoming, 2010.

5
Purpose
  • To develop a taxonomy to better understand health
    care decision-making
  • Caveat This taxonomy does not explain how
    decisions are made but rather helps explain the
    context in which decisions are made
  • To help distinguish between advisory-making and
    decision-making

6
Outline
  • Conceptual Framework
  • Simple Model of Health Care Exclusion Whats in
    and whats out of the Medicare basket?
  • Jurisdictional Levels Processes Used in
    Canadian Health Care Decision-Making
  • Conclusion

7
Conceptual Framework
  • Deconstruct health care decision-making
  • Define health care decision-making as opposed to
    health care advisory-making

8
Health Care ExclusionWhats In and Whats Out
of Medicare?
  • Consider a society with competing interests.
  • Each group differs in their capacity to engage in
    and benefit from exclusionary actions.
  • As long as the aggregate net benefit from
    exclusionary actions is sufficient, institutions
    will develop to support such actions (or efforts).

9
Health Care ExclusionWhats In and Whats Out
of Medicare?
  • Institutions that support exclusionary efforts
    are more likely to develop if
  • Those that benefit and the magnitude of their
    payoffs are large
  • Those that suffer adverse effects or the size of
    such effects are small or
  • Where the costs of engaging in exclusionary
    efforts are small.

10
Health Care Decision-Making
  • Health care decision-making is a
    context-specific process involving a range of
    stakeholders and a broad array of evidence that
    is designed to yield resource allocations that
    may differentially advance the interests of
    participants to health care transactions.

11
Health Care Advisory-Making
  • Within the public civil service and arms
    length advisory committees, advice on how to
    proceed with a decision is often developed and
    provided. This must not be confused with
    decision-making which often involves different
    factors.

12
Advisory Example OHTAC Process for Reviewing
Health Technologies
HT evidence based policy analysis and Ontario
based data analysis 16 weeks
Pre-assessment for OHTAC prioritisation
  • Recommend
  • Implement
  • Not implement
  • Re-visit
  • Field evaluation
  • Registry study

Application to OHTAC through MAS for review
MOHLTC response and policy decision within 60
days. Appeals process
Application with Sponsorship
MAS
OHTAC
MOHLTC
13
Medical Advisory Secretariat HTPA Process
  • Systematic Review - Effectiveness
  • Search databases
  • Selection criteria
  • Analysis
  • Consult experts,
  • industry
  • OHTAC Critical Review
  • Recommend to DM
  • Disseminate on Website
  • Policy Options Ontario Specific Analysis
  • Ethical, legal, regulatory, systems
    implications
  • Options
  • Prioritisation
  • Description
  • Priority score
  • OHTAC
  • Prioritisation
  • Economic Analysis
  • Budget impact
  • CEA
  • Cost avoidance
  • Expert Review of HTPA

-
  • Published systematic review available

MAS HTPA Unit
Synthesis Review
MAS HTPA
14
Two Major Components to Decision-Making
  • Jurisdictional Level of Decision-Making from
    National to Individual Decision-Making and
  • Process of Decision Making from Centralized to
    Devolved Decision-Making.

15
Nested Optimization Problems Characterized by a
Cascade of Constraints
  • Optimization decisions are subject to an array of
    constraints on the choice set or course of
    action.
  • Each level of decision-making authority may
    impose constraints on each subsequent level.
  • These restrictions on decision-making narrow the
    range of possibilities afforded to stakeholders.

16
Jurisdictional Levels of Decision-Making
  • Federal
  • Provincial
  • Regional (Regional Health Authorities)
  • Transfer Agencies (i.e. hospitals, home health
    care agencies, etc.)
  • Municipalities
  • Individual Care Providers
  • Individual Care Recipients

17
Components of the Decision-Making Process
Centralized
Devolved
Level of Decision-Making
Macro
Meso
Micro
18
Three Broad Sets of Health CareDecision-Making
Processes
  • Closed-door/Top-down decision-making where
    decisions are taken by the governing body with
    control constitutionally ordained or otherwise
    over a particular decision without publicly
    transparent consultations with stakeholders.
  • Bilateral decision-making where decisions are
    jointly determined by both the governing body and
    stakeholders/other levels of government with some
    form of publicly visible process that may be
    combative or amenable to consensus-building.
  • Hands-off/Bottom-up decision-making where the
    governing body over a particular decision
    devolves authority to the stakeholders to make
    decisions by which they agree to abide.

19
Taxonomy for Health Care Decision-Making
Decision-making process
Centralized
Devolved
Level of Decision-making
Macro
Meso
Micro
20
Federal Role
  • Promotion of health, setting and enforcing
    standards, and managing measures designed to
    increase accountability.
  • Direct provision of insurance/services to
    population segments.
  • Approval of safe and efficacious drugs - Food and
    Drug Act.
  • Drug price regulation - Patented Medicines Prices
    Review Board.
  • Leadership in health technology assessments with
    product listing recommends to the Provinces -
    Canadian Coordinating Office of Health Technology
    Assessment (CCOHTA), Common Drug Review (CCR),
    and the Canadian Expert Drug Advisory Committee
    (CEDAC).

21
Provincial Role
  • Provinces effectively define services that will
    be publicly-funded, and hence, medically
    necessary set fee schedules for provider
    reimbursement and set global budgets for health
    care institutions.
  • Provinces directly fund some hospital-based
    services, known in Ontario as Priority
    Programs, that lie outside of hospital global
    budget --
  • Cochlear implants (Bilateral decision-making)
  • MRIs (Bilateral decision-making)
  • PET scanners (Hands-off/Bottom-up
    decision-making)
  • Genetic Testing (Absence decision-making rules
    for public funding, thereby raising concerns
    about access to care)

22
Provincial Role Prescription Drugs
  • The advent of a common drug review process at the
    federal level has relegated provincial committees
    to advice on how to list (i.e. general use,
    limited use, etc.) rather than what to list.
    (Closed-door/Top-down decision-making)
  • Recent advice from CEDAC to not fund the
    first-in-therapeutic class treatments--Replagal
    and Fabrazym--for Fabry Disease will be test of
    cohesiveness of provinces in responding to a
    thumbs down advisory from this process.
  • Beta Interferon available in Ontario under a
    Section 8 process, where a prescriber makes a
    case-by-case application to the Drug Quality and
    Therapeutics Committee (DQTC) for approval
    compared to Quebec where the drug is fully funded.

23
Provincial Role Physician/Hospital Services
  • Negotiated settlements between physicians and
    provinces (Bilateral decision-making)
  • Future of this process is now being tested in
    Ontario due to the events of the past week.
  • Quebecs Bill 114 is an example of a
    closed-door/top-down decision making process
    where control occurs through back-to-work
    legislation.
  • Most provinces have adopted a hands-off/bottom-up
    decision-making process regarding requests for
    out-of-province/out-of-country treatment

24
Provincial Role Home Care Services
  • Devolution of responsibility to regional health
    authorities or Community Care Access Centres
    (CCACs) in Ontario.
  • Since 1997, CCACs divested themselves of direct
    service providers and allocated service contracts
    on the basis of a competitive bidding process.
    (Hands-off/bottom-up decision-making)
  • Community Care Access Corporations Act of 2001
    returned some control to the province, advanced
    CCAC accountability, and maintained a
    hands-off/bottom-up relationship with direct
    service providers.

25
Regional Decision-Makers (Regional Health
Authorities)
  • The following RHA processes are normally
    characterized as hands-off/bottom-up
    decision-making
  • Internal allocation by transfer agencies of
    financial resources to meet volume/deliver
    expectations
  • Fundraising activities for internal use by
    institutions
  • Monitoring of quality measures against regional
    standards
  • Staffing patterns and allocation to meet needs.
  • Many opportunities for local sabotage of regional
    priorities and initiatives by swaying public
    opinion.
  • Contracting-out to private-for-profit clinics.

26
Hospitals and Other Transfer Agencies
  • Through their global budgets, along with
    additional funding through fundraising or
    charitable contributions, hospitals must decide
    on the adoption of new technologies through their
    respective pharmacy and therapeutics committee.
    (Closed-door/top-down decision-making)

27
Individual Care Providers Care Recipients
  • Health care decision-making processes are
    shifting towards more bilateral processes and
    away from more closed-door/top-down processes
    as patients become more informed through various
    media.
  • Different views on the merits of this development
    exist, particularly if the capacity to benefit
    from shared decision-making is unevenly
    distributed in society.

28
Conclusion (I)
  • We offer a taxonomy for health care
    decision-making that highlights the constraints
    under which decisions are made.
  • In 2003, national health expenditures were
    estimated to be 121.4 B 3,839 per capita
    10 of GDP (CIHI, 2003)
  • growth in expenditures is well in excess of
    growth of overall economy
  • Increase health service accountability more
    centralized decision-making are responses to
    insatiable appetite for health care services.
  • The limited role for cost-effectiveness analysis
    under the Canada Health Act which emphasizes
    medical necessity
  • Is it time to change to standard of reasonable
    and necessary?
  • Pressure from private markets and the
    relationships between public and private markets

29
Conclusion (II)
  • Pressure from higher government levels limits
    decision-making on the government (or other
    decision-maker) below.
  • Changing relationship between physicians and
    patients.
  • The future role of LHINs in--and impact
    upon--decision-making
  • Maybe different than RHAs given differences in
    governance structures
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