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Valuing Health Surveillance as an Information System: Interdisciplinary Insights

The economic evaluation of health surveillance systems and of health information is a methodological challenge, as for information systems in general. Main present threads are considering cost-effectiveness solutions, minimizing costs for a given technically required output, or cost-benefit analysis...

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Autores principales: Antoine-Moussiaux, Nicolas, Vandenberg, Olivier, Kozlakidis, Zisis, Aenishaenslin, Cécile, Peyre, Marisa, Roche, Mathieu, Bonnet, Pascal, Ravel, André
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6585471/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31263687
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2019.00138
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author Antoine-Moussiaux, Nicolas
Vandenberg, Olivier
Kozlakidis, Zisis
Aenishaenslin, Cécile
Peyre, Marisa
Roche, Mathieu
Bonnet, Pascal
Ravel, André
author_facet Antoine-Moussiaux, Nicolas
Vandenberg, Olivier
Kozlakidis, Zisis
Aenishaenslin, Cécile
Peyre, Marisa
Roche, Mathieu
Bonnet, Pascal
Ravel, André
author_sort Antoine-Moussiaux, Nicolas
collection PubMed
description The economic evaluation of health surveillance systems and of health information is a methodological challenge, as for information systems in general. Main present threads are considering cost-effectiveness solutions, minimizing costs for a given technically required output, or cost-benefit analysis, balancing costs with economic benefits of duly informed public interventions. The latter option, following a linear command-and-control perspective, implies considering a main causal link between information, decision, action, and health benefits. Yet, valuing information, taking into account its nature and multiple sources, the modalities of its processing cycle, from production to diffusion, decentralized use and gradual building of a shared information capital, constitutes a promising challenge. This work proposes an interdisciplinary insight on the value of health surveillance to get a renewed theoretical framework integrating information and informatics theory and information economics. The reflection is based on a typological approach of value, basically distinguishing between use and non-use values. Through this structured discussion, the main idea is to expand the boundaries of surveillance evaluation, to focus on changes and trends, on the dynamic and networked structure of information systems, on the contribution of diverse data, and on the added value of combining qualitative and quantitative information. Distancing itself from the command-and-control model, this reflection considers the behavioral fundaments of many health risks, as well as the decentralized, progressive and deliberative dimension of decision-making in risk management. The framework also draws on lessons learnt from recent applications within and outside of health sector, as in surveillance of antimicrobial resistance, inter-laboratory networks, the use of big data or web sources, the diffusion of technological products and large-scale financial risks. Finally, the paper poses the bases to think the challenge of a workable approach to economic evaluation of health surveillance through a better understanding of health information value. It aims to avoid over-simplifying the range of health information benefits across society while keeping evaluation within the boundaries of what may be ascribed to the assessed information system.
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spelling pubmed-65854712019-07-01 Valuing Health Surveillance as an Information System: Interdisciplinary Insights Antoine-Moussiaux, Nicolas Vandenberg, Olivier Kozlakidis, Zisis Aenishaenslin, Cécile Peyre, Marisa Roche, Mathieu Bonnet, Pascal Ravel, André Front Public Health Public Health The economic evaluation of health surveillance systems and of health information is a methodological challenge, as for information systems in general. Main present threads are considering cost-effectiveness solutions, minimizing costs for a given technically required output, or cost-benefit analysis, balancing costs with economic benefits of duly informed public interventions. The latter option, following a linear command-and-control perspective, implies considering a main causal link between information, decision, action, and health benefits. Yet, valuing information, taking into account its nature and multiple sources, the modalities of its processing cycle, from production to diffusion, decentralized use and gradual building of a shared information capital, constitutes a promising challenge. This work proposes an interdisciplinary insight on the value of health surveillance to get a renewed theoretical framework integrating information and informatics theory and information economics. The reflection is based on a typological approach of value, basically distinguishing between use and non-use values. Through this structured discussion, the main idea is to expand the boundaries of surveillance evaluation, to focus on changes and trends, on the dynamic and networked structure of information systems, on the contribution of diverse data, and on the added value of combining qualitative and quantitative information. Distancing itself from the command-and-control model, this reflection considers the behavioral fundaments of many health risks, as well as the decentralized, progressive and deliberative dimension of decision-making in risk management. The framework also draws on lessons learnt from recent applications within and outside of health sector, as in surveillance of antimicrobial resistance, inter-laboratory networks, the use of big data or web sources, the diffusion of technological products and large-scale financial risks. Finally, the paper poses the bases to think the challenge of a workable approach to economic evaluation of health surveillance through a better understanding of health information value. It aims to avoid over-simplifying the range of health information benefits across society while keeping evaluation within the boundaries of what may be ascribed to the assessed information system. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-06-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6585471/ /pubmed/31263687 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2019.00138 Text en Copyright © 2019 Antoine-Moussiaux, Vandenberg, Kozlakidis, Aenishaenslin, Peyre, Roche, Bonnet and Ravel. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Public Health
Antoine-Moussiaux, Nicolas
Vandenberg, Olivier
Kozlakidis, Zisis
Aenishaenslin, Cécile
Peyre, Marisa
Roche, Mathieu
Bonnet, Pascal
Ravel, André
Valuing Health Surveillance as an Information System: Interdisciplinary Insights
title Valuing Health Surveillance as an Information System: Interdisciplinary Insights
title_full Valuing Health Surveillance as an Information System: Interdisciplinary Insights
title_fullStr Valuing Health Surveillance as an Information System: Interdisciplinary Insights
title_full_unstemmed Valuing Health Surveillance as an Information System: Interdisciplinary Insights
title_short Valuing Health Surveillance as an Information System: Interdisciplinary Insights
title_sort valuing health surveillance as an information system: interdisciplinary insights
topic Public Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6585471/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31263687
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2019.00138
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