Health policy

Stanford Health Policy hosts a series of Health Policy Seminars, at which the centers' faculty, affiliates and invited guests discuss their research on a relevant health policy or health services research topic. Free and open to the public, the seminars are interactive forums at which attendees may ask questions and offer input on the research being discussed. The seminars are off-the-record, and any information on our website about each talk or items discussed in the seminars are embargoed until the research has been published in a journal.

Paragraphs

This issue of CHP/PCOR's quarterly newsletter covers developments from the spring 2005 quarter. It includes articles about:

  • research on HIV/AIDS in Russia -- presented in May at an international conference -- which shows that in order to contain the country's rapidly expanding HIV/AIDS epidemic, Russia must aggressively treat HIV-positive injection drug users;
  • a CHP/PCOR-hosted discussion session with Edward Sondik, director of the National Center for Health Statistics;
  • an ongoing CHP/PCOR study that examines older adults' preferences about health states in which they would need help with basic tasks like bathing or eating;
  • a panel discussion on "International Responses to Infectious Diseases," led by CHP/PCOR at the Stanford Institute for International Studies' first annual conference, featuring the World Health Organization's chief of infectious diseases;
  • a widely publicized study by CHP/PCOR researchers which found that obese workers are paid less than non-obese workers in similar jobs, but only when they have employer-sponsored health insurance -- a finding suggesting that the wage gap is due to obese workers' higher medical costs, rather than outright prejudice; and
  • an update on the Center on Advancing Decision Making for Aging, including two new seed projects and a lecture given by economics and psychology professor George Loewenstein.
All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Newsletters
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
CHP/PCOR
Authors
Paragraphs

Some important health policy topics, such as those related to the delivery, organization, and financing of health care, present substantial challenges to established methods for evidence synthesis. For example, such reviews may ask: What is the effect of for-profit versus not-for-profit delivery of care on patient outcomes? Or, which strategies are the most effective for promoting preventive care? This paper desc ribes innovative methods for synthesizing evidence related to the delivery, organization, and financing of health care. We found 13 systematic reviews on these topics that described novel methodologic approaches. Several of these syntheses used 3 approaches: conceptual frameworks to inform problem formulation, systematic searches that included nontraditional literature sources, and hybrid synthesis methods that included simulations to address key gaps in the literature. As the primary literature on these topics expands, so will opportunities to develop additional novel methods for performing high-quality comprehensive syntheses.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Journal Articles
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Annals of Internal Medicine, supplement on "Challenges of Summarizing Better Information for Better Health"
Authors
Douglas K. Owens
Paragraphs

BACKGROUND: Gender differences in health system usage can lead to differences in the incidence of morbidity and mortality. We conducted a pilot screening targeted towards men to evaluate gender differences in cardiovascular disease risk factor detection and time since last clinic visit.

METHODS: Three evening sessions in two communities screened 148 people, mean age 47.7 years. Height, weight, body mass index, blood pressure, blood glucose, and total cholesterol were measured. A questionnaire on past medical history was administered. Participants with elevated measurements were referred to appropriate care.

RESULTS: Men accounted for 60.1% of those screened; 65.5% of the group was overweight, and 22.3% was obese with 42.6% hypertension, 39.2% hypercholesterolemia, and 2.7% high blood glucose. Among men aged 35 to 65, 65.2% were overweight, 20.3% obese, 46.4% hypertensive, 42.0% hypercholesterolemic, and 1.5% with high blood glucose. Within the last 2 years, 53.3% of men and 9.1% of women aged 35 to 65 had not visited a doctor (P = 0.004).

CONCLUSIONS: A significant portion of those screened had elevated cardiovascular disease risk factors. Given that men visited doctors significantly less frequently, efforts to involve men in prevention of cardiovascular disease within these communities are warranted.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Journal Articles
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Preventative Medicine
Authors
Jeremy Goldhaber-Fiebert
Paragraphs

Quality assurance (QA) processes for new technologies are used to ensure safety. Clinical decision support systems (DSS), identified by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) as an important tool in preventing patient errors, should undergo similar predeployment testing to prevent introduction of new errors. Post-fielding surveillance, akin to post-marketing surveillance for adverse events, may detect rarely occurring problems that appear only in widespread use. To assess the quality of a guideline-based DSS for hypertension, ATHENA DSS, researchers monitored real-time clinician feedback during point-of-care use of the system. Comments (n = 835) were submitted by 44 of the 91 (48.4 percent) study clinicians (median 8.5 comments/ clinician). Twenty-three (2.8 percent) comments identified important, rarely occurring problems. Timely analysis of such feedback revealed omissions of medications, diagnoses, and adverse drug reactions due to rare events in data extraction and conversion from the electronic health record. Analysis of clinician-user feedback facilitated rapid detection and correction of such errors. Based on this experience, new technologies for improving patient safety should include mechanisms for post-fielding quality assurance testing.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Books
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) in "Advances in Patient Safety: From Research to Implementation"
Authors
Mark A. Musen
Mary K. Goldstein
Mark A. Musen
Mary K. Goldstein
Paragraphs

Purpose:

To examine U.S. adolescents' (age 13-18) utilization of ambulatory care and the likelihood of receiving preventive counseling from 1993 through 2000.

Methods:

The National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey provided visit-based data on counseling services that occurred in private physician offices and hospital outpatient departments. Main outcome measures included adolescents' use of outpatient care and their likelihood of being counseled on 3 health promotion topics (i.e., diet, exercise, and growth/development) and 5 risk reduction topics (i.e., tobacco use/exposure, skin cancer prevention, injury prevention, family planning/contraception, and HIV/STD transmission).

Results:

Adolescents had the lowest rates of outpatient visits among all age groups, with particularly low rates among boys and ethnic minorities. Most frequently, adolescent visits were for upper respiratory tract conditions, acne, routine medical or physical examinations, and, for girls, prenatal care. In 1997-2000, counseling services were documented for 39% (99% CI: 32-46%) of all adolescent general medical/physical examination (GME) visits. Diet [26% of GME visits (20-32%)] and exercise [22% (17-28%)] were the most frequent counseling topics. The counseling rates of the other six topics ranged from as low as 3 to 20%, with skin cancer prevention, HIV/STD transmission, and family planning/contraception ranking the lowest. These rates represented minimal improvements from 1993-1996 both in absolute term and in relation to the gaps between practices and recommendations.

Conclusions:

Adolescents underutilize primary care, and even those who do receive care are underserved for their health counseling needs. The noted lack of change over time suggests that satisfactory improvement is unlikely unless substantial interventions are undertaken.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Journal Articles
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Journal of Adolescent Health
Authors
Randall S. Stafford
Randall S. Stafford
Paragraphs

In 1998, the Chinese government proposed a universal health-insurance program for urban employees. However, this reform has been advancing slowly, primarily due to an unpractical financing policy. We surveyed over 2000 families and evaluated the financial impacts of Beijing's reform on public and private enterprises. We found that most state-owned enterprises provided effective health insurance, whereas most private firms did not; overall, 33% of employees had little or no coverage. On average, employees of private firms were healthier and earned more compared to public firms. Because the premium was proportional to income, private firms would pay more for insurance than the predicted health-care expense of their employees. International firms subsidize the most, contributing more than 60% of their insurance premiums to the employees of the public sector. Such an aggressive cross-subsidization policy is difficult to be accepted by private firms.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Journal Articles
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Health Policy
Authors
Subscribe to Health policy