Supply, utilisation and outcome in hospital systems: an Anglo-Czech comparison

Citation
Dp. Forster et al., Supply, utilisation and outcome in hospital systems: an Anglo-Czech comparison, HEALTH POLI, 48(3), 1999, pp. 171-187
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science","Health Care Sciences & Services
Journal title
HEALTH POLICY
ISSN journal
01688510 → ACNP
Volume
48
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Pages
171 - 187
Database
ISI
SICI code
0168-8510(199909)48:3<171:SUAOIH>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
In the 1990s health services in Czechoslovakia and England and Wales were f undamentally reorganised, and the former divided into the Czech Republic an d Slovakia. In the Czech Republic in 1986 higher death rates from causes co nsidered amenable to timely medical care were found relative to England in 1985, despite high hospital doctor supply, bed availability and discharge r ates in the former. Inter-regional regression analyses in the specialities of general medicine and general surgery in 1986 suggested that, in both Cze choslovakia and England and Wales, the responsiveness of discharge rates to a relative scarcity or abundance of hospital beds was greater than that of length of stay. In Czechoslovakia these analyses in 1986 predicted that a 1% decrease in the bed supply rate would produce a decrease in the range 0. 93-1% in discharge rates in general medicine and a 0.66-0.67% decrease in g eneral surgery. Following the introduction of an insurance based service in the Czech Republic, a longitudinal analysis of the actual changes in bed u tilisation showed that bed supply reductions were concomitant with increase d discharge rates. Since cross-sectional analyses do not include the compon ents of changes with time, for instance medical advances or management chan ges, care is required in their use for prediction. In the Czech Republic im proved hospital performance, compared to that prevailing in 1986 and earlie r, does appear to be taking place at the same time as health system changes . Given the prior poor performance and inferior quality indicators, the dri ve for radical rather than marginal change in Czech health services around 1990 is understandable. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights r eserved.