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The Quality Improvement Demonstration Study: An example of evidence-based policy-making in practice

BACKGROUND: Randomized trials have long been the gold-standard for evaluating clinical practice. There is growing recognition that rigorous studies are similarly needed to assess the effects of policy. However, these studies are rarely conducted. We report on the Quality Improvement Demonstration St...

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Autores principales: Shimkhada, Riti, Peabody, John W, Quimbo, Stella A, Solon, Orville
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2292719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18364050
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-4505-6-5
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author Shimkhada, Riti
Peabody, John W
Quimbo, Stella A
Solon, Orville
author_facet Shimkhada, Riti
Peabody, John W
Quimbo, Stella A
Solon, Orville
author_sort Shimkhada, Riti
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Randomized trials have long been the gold-standard for evaluating clinical practice. There is growing recognition that rigorous studies are similarly needed to assess the effects of policy. However, these studies are rarely conducted. We report on the Quality Improvement Demonstration Study (QIDS), an example of a large randomized policy experiment, introduced and conducted in a scientific manner to evaluate the impact of large-scale governmental policy interventions. METHODS: In 1999 the Philippine government proposed sweeping reforms in the National Health Sector Reform Agenda. We recognized the unique opportunity to conduct a social experiment. Our ongoing goal has been to generate results that inform health policy. Early on we concentrated on developing a multi-institutional collaborative effort. The QIDS team then developed hypotheses that specifically evaluated the impact of two policy reforms on both the delivery of care and long-term health status in children. We formed an experimental design by randomizing matched blocks of three communities into one of the two policy interventions plus a control group. Based on the reform agenda, one arm of the experiment provided expanded insurance coverage for children; the other introduced performance-based payments to hospitals and physicians. Data were collected in household, hospital-based patient exit, and facility surveys, as well as clinical vignettes, which were used to assess physician practice. Delivery of services and health status were evaluated at baseline and after the interventions were put in place using difference-in-difference estimation. RESULTS: We found and addressed numerous challenges conducting this study, namely: formalizing the experimental design using the existing health infrastructure; securing funding to do research coincident with the policy reforms; recognizing biases and designing the study to account for these; putting in place a broad data collection effort to account for unanticipated findings; introducing sustainable policy interventions based on the reform agenda; and providing results in real-time to policy makers through a combination of venues. CONCLUSION: QIDS demonstrates that a large, prospective, randomized controlled policy experiment can be successfully implemented at a national level as part of sectoral reform. While we believe policy experiments should be used to generate evidence-based health policy, to do this requires opportunity and trust, strong collaborative relationships, and timing. This study nurtures the growing attitude that translation of scientific findings from the bedside to the community can be done successfully and that we should raise the bar on project evaluation and the policy-making process.
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spelling pubmed-22927192008-04-12 The Quality Improvement Demonstration Study: An example of evidence-based policy-making in practice Shimkhada, Riti Peabody, John W Quimbo, Stella A Solon, Orville Health Res Policy Syst Research BACKGROUND: Randomized trials have long been the gold-standard for evaluating clinical practice. There is growing recognition that rigorous studies are similarly needed to assess the effects of policy. However, these studies are rarely conducted. We report on the Quality Improvement Demonstration Study (QIDS), an example of a large randomized policy experiment, introduced and conducted in a scientific manner to evaluate the impact of large-scale governmental policy interventions. METHODS: In 1999 the Philippine government proposed sweeping reforms in the National Health Sector Reform Agenda. We recognized the unique opportunity to conduct a social experiment. Our ongoing goal has been to generate results that inform health policy. Early on we concentrated on developing a multi-institutional collaborative effort. The QIDS team then developed hypotheses that specifically evaluated the impact of two policy reforms on both the delivery of care and long-term health status in children. We formed an experimental design by randomizing matched blocks of three communities into one of the two policy interventions plus a control group. Based on the reform agenda, one arm of the experiment provided expanded insurance coverage for children; the other introduced performance-based payments to hospitals and physicians. Data were collected in household, hospital-based patient exit, and facility surveys, as well as clinical vignettes, which were used to assess physician practice. Delivery of services and health status were evaluated at baseline and after the interventions were put in place using difference-in-difference estimation. RESULTS: We found and addressed numerous challenges conducting this study, namely: formalizing the experimental design using the existing health infrastructure; securing funding to do research coincident with the policy reforms; recognizing biases and designing the study to account for these; putting in place a broad data collection effort to account for unanticipated findings; introducing sustainable policy interventions based on the reform agenda; and providing results in real-time to policy makers through a combination of venues. CONCLUSION: QIDS demonstrates that a large, prospective, randomized controlled policy experiment can be successfully implemented at a national level as part of sectoral reform. While we believe policy experiments should be used to generate evidence-based health policy, to do this requires opportunity and trust, strong collaborative relationships, and timing. This study nurtures the growing attitude that translation of scientific findings from the bedside to the community can be done successfully and that we should raise the bar on project evaluation and the policy-making process. BioMed Central 2008-03-25 /pmc/articles/PMC2292719/ /pubmed/18364050 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-4505-6-5 Text en Copyright © 2008 Shimkhada et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Shimkhada, Riti
Peabody, John W
Quimbo, Stella A
Solon, Orville
The Quality Improvement Demonstration Study: An example of evidence-based policy-making in practice
title The Quality Improvement Demonstration Study: An example of evidence-based policy-making in practice
title_full The Quality Improvement Demonstration Study: An example of evidence-based policy-making in practice
title_fullStr The Quality Improvement Demonstration Study: An example of evidence-based policy-making in practice
title_full_unstemmed The Quality Improvement Demonstration Study: An example of evidence-based policy-making in practice
title_short The Quality Improvement Demonstration Study: An example of evidence-based policy-making in practice
title_sort quality improvement demonstration study: an example of evidence-based policy-making in practice
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2292719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18364050
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-4505-6-5
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