1.Rationing of nursing care and its relationship to nurse practice environment in a tertiary public hospital.
Reiner Lorenzo J. TAMAYO ; Maria Khrizalyn Faye QUINTIN-GUTIERREZ ; Mildred B. CAMPO ; Marivin Joy F. LIM ; Peter T. LABUNI
Acta Medica Philippina 2022;56(3):64-71
Objectives: The purpose of the study is to determine the level of rationing of nursing care and its relationship to nurses' perception of their practice environment.
Methods: The study employed a descriptive, cross-sectional study design. The Basel Extent of Rationing of Nursing Care (BERNCA) was administered to assess the level of care rationing while the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index (PES-NWI) was used to describe nurses' practice environment. A total of 147 nurses participated in the study. Multiple regression analysis was conducted to determine the effect of various respondent characteristics and nurse practice environment on care rationing.
Results: Only practice environment total score was significantly associated with rationing of care total scores (B = -0.20, p < 0.05). Results of the regression show that for every unit increase in nurse practice environment total score, indicating a better work environment, there is a 0.20 unit decrease in rationing of nursing care total score, which indicated less rationing of care. Respondent characteristics are not significantly related.
Conclusion: Nurses most frequently rationed tasks in the areas of caring/support and monitoring. The less frequently rationed tasks involved medical, technical, and therapeutic aspects of care. The identification of rationing predictors can aid in determining starting points for hospital policy reforms. Prevalence levels can indicate when care rationing exceeds identified thresholds, if any. Nursing administrators can use implicit rationing of nursing care as a crucial indicator of the impact of strategies and changes in the nurse practice environment (e.g., changes in staffing levels, skill mix, and other resources).
Key Words: Health Care Rationing, Health Facility Environment, Nursing Care
Health Care Rationing ; Health Facility Environment ; Nursing Care
2.Organ Allocation for Transplantation in the USA and Korea: The Changing Roles of Equity and Utility.
R Randal BOLLINGER ; Won Hyun CHO
Yonsei Medical Journal 2004;45(6):1035-1042
Realizing the promise and managing the success of organ transplantation requires the creation of unique institutions. An Organ Procurement and Transplant Network (OPTN) must be capable of increasing the supply of cadaver donor organs, of allocating those organs properly to recipients with due consideration for equity and utility, and of using scientific data to improve the system for the good of society. The OPTN should answer to the public and should expect public support. Both in the United States and in Korea major changes in deceased donor organ procurement and allocation are in progress. In the United States change takes the form of a renewed emphasis on achieving equity in kidney allocation without significantly sacrificing transplant graft or patient survival and the first ever use of purely objective, statistically evaluated criteria for liver allocation. In Korea where the OPTN is only four years old, change takes the form of a new brain death law and the creation of that country's first organ procurement organizations. In both countries, success in meeting the transplant needs of their populations will ultimately depend on the support of society and the cooperation of the entire medical community.
*Health Care Rationing
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Humans
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Kidney Transplantation
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Korea
;
Liver Transplantation
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*Organ Transplantation
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*Tissue and Organ Procurement
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United States
4.The extent and relative changes of equities in utilization of prenatal care among women in some areas of China.
Ying-hui LIU ; Rong-wei YE ; Jian-meng LIU ; Zhu LI
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2006;40(3):177-179
OBJECTIVETo assess the extent and relative changes of the equities in prenatal care utilization among women with different educational attainment in some areas of China.
METHODSData were collected in 13 counties/cities covered by Perinatal Health Care Surveillance System established by Institute of Reproductive and Child Health, Peking University. The study population consisted of 103 704 women who delivered single live births in 1994 and 2000. Chi-square and multiple logistic regression were employed to compare the systematic management rates and relative risks. Concentration index was used to assess the relative changes of equities in prenatal care utilization. SPSS 11.5 and Microsoft Excel 2003 were used for analysis.
RESULTSThe total systematic management rate was 22.1% in 1994 and 57.4% in 2000. The concentration index was -0.046 in 1994 and 0.066 in 2000. In northern areas, the concentration index increased from 0.015 in 1994 to 0.295 in 2000, while it increased from -0.015 in 1994 to 0.062 in 2000 in southern areas. In rural areas, the concentration index increased from 0.002 in 1994 to 0.026 in 2000, while it decreased from 0.042 in 1994 to 0.019 in 2000 in urban areas.
CONCLUSIONInequities in prenatal care utilization in 2000 become more obvious than in 1994, especially in northern areas. More attention should be paid to solve the inequities.
China ; Culture ; Female ; Health Care Rationing ; Healthcare Disparities ; Humans ; Prenatal Care ; statistics & numerical data ; utilization ; Rural Population
5.Patterns and Influential Factors of Inter-Regional Migration of New and Experienced Nurses in 2011~2015.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2017;47(5):676-688
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to analyze the migration patterns of new nurses and experienced nurses and to identify the factors influencing inter-regional migration for solving regional imbalances of clinical nurses in South Korea. METHODS: This study involved a secondary analysis of data from the Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service (HIRA). Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and multiple logistic regression analysis. RESULTS: New nurses tended to migrate from Kyunggi to Seoul. However, experienced nurses tended to migrate from Seoul and Chungchung to Kyunggi. Significant predictors of inter-regional migration among new nurses were location and nurse staffing grade of hospitals. Significant predictors of inter-regional migration among experienced nurses were location, hospital type, nurse staffing grade, ownership of hospitals and age of nurses. CONCLUSION: Inter-regional migration occupied a small portion of total hospital movement among clinical nurses. The regional imbalances of nurses were not caused by the migration from non-metropolitan areas to Seoul. Nurse shortage problems in the small and medium hospitals of the non-metropolitan area can be solved only through improvement of work environment.
Geography
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Gyeonggi-do
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Health Care Rationing
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Human Migration
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Insurance, Health
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Korea
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Logistic Models
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Ownership
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Personnel Turnover
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Seoul
7.Is cost-effective healthcare compatible with publicly financed academic medical centres?
Whay Kuang CHIA ; Han Chong TOH
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2013;42(1):42-48
Probably more than any country, Singapore has made significant investment into the biomedical enterprise as a proportion of its economy and size. This focus recently witnessed a shift towards a greater emphasis on translational and clinical development. Key to the realisation of this strategy will be Academic Medical Centres (AMCs), as a principal tool to developing and applying useful products for the market and further improving health outcomes. Here, we explore the principal value proposition of the AMC to Singapore society and its healthcare system. We question if the values inherent within academic medicine--that of inquiry, innovation, pedagogy and clinical exceptionalism--can be compatible with the seemingly paradoxical mandate of providing cost-effective or rationed healthcare.
Academic Medical Centers
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economics
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organization & administration
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Cost-Benefit Analysis
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Financing, Government
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Health Care Costs
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Health Care Rationing
;
Quality of Health Care
;
Singapore
8.A cost-utility study on HIV/AIDS 'one-stop service' pilot at county level.
Hui XUE ; Jiangping SUN ; Duo SHAN ; Yiyun HU ; Email: YIYUNHU@CHINAAIDS.CN.
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2015;49(6):501-505
OBJECTIVETo conduct a cost utility study on the HIV/AIDS 'one-stop service' at county level.
METHODSFinancial records and questionnaires were used to collect the information about the resource allocation and the effectiveness of antivirus treatment (ART) during the two period which were January 2012-June 2013 and July 2013-December 2013 in the three pilot counties providing 'one-stop service'. Treeage Pro 2009 was used to build the Markov model to simulate the evolution of 5 different HIV statuses, including HIV infection, AIDS, HIV infection receiving ART, AIDS receiving ART and death. And compared the cost-utility ratios between current ART process and 'one-stop service' process. National and local epidemic data and literature review were used to provide the parameters in the model, including prior probabilities of each status, transferring probabilities among each status, health utility values and investments of each status and discount rate.
RESULTSThe expenditures related with 'one-stop service' in the three counties were 2 627 339, 209 969, and 191 658 RMB, respectively between July and December, 2013. The average periods from HIV infection confirmation to ART initiation was reduced from 8 weeks to 18, 10 and 16 days, respectively. The percentage of receiving ART within 30 d among those qualified were increased from 46.7% (63/135) to 64.3% (45/70) in county A, from 40.0% (16/40) to 69.4% (25/36) in county B, and from 9.5% (4/42) to 50.0% (19/38) in county C. If current process was applied, the CUR in three counties would be 10 391.89 RMB/quality adjusted life years (QALY), 6 271.42 RMB/QALY and 3 515.94 RMB/QALY, and these would be 10 825.08 RMB/QALY, 8 522.30 RMB/QALY and 10 414.65 RMB/QALY with application of 'one-stop service'.
CONCLUSION'one-stop service' could decrease the interval between HIV infection confirmation and ART initiation and increase the percentage of receiving ART among people living with HIV(PLHIV), more QALYs would be obtained with more resources invested.
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ; Anti-HIV Agents ; Cost-Benefit Analysis ; Epidemics ; HIV Infections ; Health Care Rationing ; Humans ; Quality-Adjusted Life Years ; Survival Rate ; Time-to-Treatment
9.Horizontal Inequity in Elderly Health Care Utilization: Evidence from India.
William JOE ; Shalini RUDRA ; S V SUBRAMANIAN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2015;30(Suppl 2):S155-S166
Against the backdrop of population aging, this paper presents the analysis of need-standardised health care utilization among elderly in India. Based on nationally representative morbidity and health care survey 2004, we demonstrate that the need for health care utilization is indeed pro-poor in nature. However, the actual health care utilization is concentrated among richer sections of the population. Further, the decomposition analysis reveals that income has a very strong role in shifting the distribution of health care away from the poor elderly. The impact of income on utilization is well-demonstrated even at the ecological-level as states with higher per capita incomes have higher elderly health care utilization even as the levels of need-predicted distribution across these states are similar. We also find that the distribution of elderly across social groups and their educational achievements favours the rich and significantly contributes to overall inequality. Nevertheless, contribution of need-related self-assessed health clearly favours pro-poor inequality. In concluding, we argue that to reduce such inequities in health care utilization it is necessary to increase public investments in health care infrastructure including geriatric care particularly in rural areas and underdeveloped regions to enhance access and quality of health care for the elderly.
Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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*Cultural Characteristics
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Evidence-Based Medicine
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Female
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Health Care Rationing/*statistics & numerical data
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Health Equity/*statistics & numerical data
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Health Services for the Aged/*utilization
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Humans
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Income/*statistics & numerical data
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India/epidemiology
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Socioeconomic Factors
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*Utilization Review
10.Key Considerations in the Recovery and Resumption of Surgical Services after the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Yi Quan TAN ; Jirong LU ; Ziting WANG ; Ho Yee TIONG ; Edmund CHIONG
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2020;49(11):922-924
COVID-19/prevention & control*
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Communicable Disease Control
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General Surgery/organization & administration*
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Guidelines as Topic
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Health Care Rationing
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Health Services Needs and Demand
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Health Workforce
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Humans
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Practice Guidelines as Topic
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SARS-CoV-2
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Singapore/epidemiology*
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Surgical Procedures, Operative
;
Triage