Abstract

ObjectiveTo establish a methodological approach to compare two high‐need, high‐cost (HNHC) patient personas internationally.Data sourcesLinked individual‐level administrative data from the inpatient and outpatient sectors compiled by the International Collaborative on Costs, Outcomes, and Needs in Care (ICCONIC) across 11 countries: Australia, Canada, England, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States.Study designWe outline a methodological approach to identify HNHC patient types for international comparisons that reflect complex, priority populations defined by the National Academy of Medicine. We define two patient profiles using accessible patient‐level datasets linked across different domains of care—hospital care, primary care, outpatient specialty care, post‐acute rehabilitative care, long‐term care, home‐health care, and outpatient drugs. The personas include a frail older adult with a hip fracture with subsequent hip replacement and an older person with complex multimorbidity, including heart failure and diabetes. We demonstrate their comparability by examining the characteristics and clinical diagnoses captured across countries.Data collection/extraction methodsData collected by ICCONIC partners.Principal findingsAcross 11 countries, the identification of HNHC patient personas was feasible to examine variations in healthcare utilization, spending, and patient outcomes. The ability of countries to examine linked, individual‐level data varied, with the Netherlands, Canada, and Germany able to comprehensively examine care across all seven domains, whereas other countries such as England, Switzerland, and New Zealand were more limited. All countries were able to identify a hip fracture persona and a heart failure persona. Patient characteristics were reassuringly similar across countries.ConclusionAlthough there are cross‐country differences in the availability and structure of data sources, countries had the ability to effectively identify comparable HNHC personas for international study. This work serves as the methodological paper for six accompanying papers examining differences in spending, utilization, and outcomes for these personas across countries.

Highlights

  • Health systems across high-income countries have similar goals, which include maximizing quality of care, offering services responsive to patient needs, and ensuring efficient health care delivery.[1,2] Health systems face similar challenges, such as changing demographics, limited national resources, and ongoing rising health care costs.[3]

  • National policy makers are working to identify effective strategies to address these challenges, which are heavily influenced by existing health system features

  • Based on a HNHC typology recently put forward by the National Academy of Medicine,[6] we identified two specific patient types or “personas”: a frail older adult who sustains a hip fracture with subsequent hip replacement or osteosynthesis and an older person with complex multimorbidity who is hospitalized with heart failure and has a comorbid diagnosis of diabetes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Health systems across high-income countries have similar goals, which include maximizing quality of care, offering services responsive to patient needs, and ensuring efficient health care delivery.[1,2] Health systems face similar challenges, such as changing demographics, limited national resources, and ongoing rising health care costs.[3]. The ICCONIC project used a case-vignette methodology to compare two specific types of HNHC personas across multiple care settings and countries constructed from patient-level administrative and registry data.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call