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1.
BMC Public Health ; 9: 452, 2009 Dec 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19961625

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: New Zealand rates of obesity and overweight have increased since the 1980s, particularly among indigenous Maori people, Pacific people and those living in areas of high deprivation. New Zealand's response to the obesity epidemic has been The Healthy Eating-Healthy Action: Oranga Kai - Oranga Pumau (HEHA) Strategy ('the Strategy'), launched in 2003. Because the HEHA Strategy explicitly recognises the importance of evaluation and the need to create an evidence base to support future initiatives, the Ministry of Health has commissioned a Consortium of researchers to evaluate the Strategy as a whole. METHODS: This paper discusses the Consortium's approach to evaluating the HEHA Strategy. It includes an outline of the conceptual framework underpinning the evaluation, and describes the critical components of the evaluation which are: judging to what extent stakeholders were engaged in the process of the strategy implementation and to what extent their feedback was incorporated in to future iterations of the Strategy (continuous improvement), to what extent the programmes, policies, and initiatives implemented span the target populations and priority areas, whether there have been any population changes in nutrition and/or physical activity outcomes or behaviours relating to those outcomes, and to what extent HEHA Strategy and spending can be considered value for money. DISCUSSION: This paper outlines our approach to evaluating a complex national health promotion strategy. Not only does the Evaluation have the potential to identify interventions that could be adopted internationally, but also the development of the Evaluation design can inform other complex evaluations.


Subject(s)
Diet , Health Promotion , Obesity/prevention & control , Primary Prevention/methods , Exercise , Health Plan Implementation , Health Services Research , Humans , New Zealand/epidemiology , Obesity/epidemiology , Outcome Assessment, Health Care
3.
J Manag Med ; 16(1): 20-33, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12069349

ABSTRACT

This paper reports a national study which investigated the involvement of infection control professionals in (and their views about) the formal processes of contracting for health care in the NHS internal market. Health care professionals needed to be involved contracting, if it was to be effective. The study found that many infection control professionals were not, in fact, involved in contracting, while the importance of both contracts and informal professional networks were recognised But respondents did not think that their professional networks entirely compensated for their lack of involvement in contracting. As formal agreements continue to be central to achieving quality of care in the post-internal market NHS, infection control professionals need to be involved in specification and implementation of these arrangements.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Contract Services/organization & administration , Infection Control Practitioners/psychology , Infection Control/organization & administration , State Medicine/organization & administration , Health Services Research , Humans , Infection Control Practitioners/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires , United Kingdom
4.
J Health Econ ; 21(2): 227-52, 2002 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11939240

ABSTRACT

Waiting times for hospital care are a significant issue in the UK National Health Service (NHS). The reforms of the health service in 1990 gave a subset of family doctors (GP fundholders) both the ability to choose the hospital where their patients were treated and the means to pay for some services. One of the key factors influencing family doctors' choice of hospital was patient waiting time. However, without cash inducements, hospitals would get no direct reward from giving shorter waiting times to a subset of patients. Using a unique dataset, we investigate whether GP fundholders were able to secure shorter waiting times for their patients, whether they were able to do so in cases where they had no financial rewards to offer hospitals, and whether the impact of fundholding spilled over into shorter waiting times for all patients.


Subject(s)
Family Practice/economics , Health Services Accessibility/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Public/economics , Hospitals, Public/statistics & numerical data , Patient Admission/economics , Waiting Lists , Budgets , Health Services Accessibility/economics , Health Services Research , Humans , Models, Econometric , Patient Admission/statistics & numerical data , Program Evaluation , Referral and Consultation/standards , Reimbursement, Incentive , State Medicine , United Kingdom
5.
Health Policy ; 59(3): 257-81, 2002 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11823028

ABSTRACT

The paper reports a unique study of contracting for infectious disease control in the English National Health Service internal market. New-institutional economic and socio-legal theories are used to predict that it will not be possible to make contracts for the control of infectious disease which are complete with respect to either the allocation of financial risk or the specification of quality standards. Socio-legal theory predicts that in some circumstances informal relationships (known as networks or relational contracts) can evolve to compensate for some of the deficiencies of incomplete contracts. NHS policy makers are shown to have expected and continue to expect that contracts can be complete. The study comprised five in-depth case studies of contracting in different local areas in England and a national survey of all infection control professionals. The results confirm the theoretical predictions. Contracts were not complete, and some of the elements of relational contracts were present. These elements did not, however, fully compensate for the lack of clear accountability caused by contractual incompleteness.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/organization & administration , Contract Services/organization & administration , Health Care Rationing , State Medicine/organization & administration , Communicable Disease Control/economics , Costs and Cost Analysis , Health Policy , Health Services Research , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Privatization , Risk Management , United Kingdom/epidemiology
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