Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- List of contributors
- List of boxes, figures and tables
- Part I Principles of performance measurement
- Part II Dimensions of performance
- 2.1 Population health
- 2.2 Patient-reported outcome measures and performance measurement
- 2.3 Measuring clinical quality and appropriateness
- 2.4 Measuring financial protection in health
- 2.5 Health systems responsiveness: a measure of the acceptability of health-care processes and systems from the user's perspective
- 2.6 Measuring equity of access to health care
- 2.7 Health system productivity and efficiency
- Part III Analytical methodology for performance measurement
- Part IV Performance measurement in specific domains
- Part V Health policy and performance measurement
- Part VI Conclusions
- Index
2.5 - Health systems responsiveness: a measure of the acceptability of health-care processes and systems from the user's perspective
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- List of contributors
- List of boxes, figures and tables
- Part I Principles of performance measurement
- Part II Dimensions of performance
- 2.1 Population health
- 2.2 Patient-reported outcome measures and performance measurement
- 2.3 Measuring clinical quality and appropriateness
- 2.4 Measuring financial protection in health
- 2.5 Health systems responsiveness: a measure of the acceptability of health-care processes and systems from the user's perspective
- 2.6 Measuring equity of access to health care
- 2.7 Health system productivity and efficiency
- Part III Analytical methodology for performance measurement
- Part IV Performance measurement in specific domains
- Part V Health policy and performance measurement
- Part VI Conclusions
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The World Health Organization (WHO) developed and proposed the concept of responsiveness, defining it as aspects of the way individuals are treated and the environment in which they are treated during health system interactions (Valentine et al. 2003). The concept covers a set of non-clinical and non-financial dimensions of quality of care that reflect respect for human dignity and interpersonal aspects of the care process, which Donabedian (1980) describes as “the vehicle by which technical care is implemented and on which its success depends”. Eight dimensions (or domains) are collectively described as goals for health-care processes and systems (along with the goals of higher average health and lower health inequalities; and non-impoverishment – as measured through other indicators): (i) dignity, (ii) autonomy, (iii) confidentiality, (iv) communication, (v) prompt attention, (vi) quality (of) basic amenities, (vii) access to social support networks during treatment (social support), and (viii) choice (of health-care providers).
Building on extensive previous work, this chapter directs the conceptual and methodological aspects of the responsiveness work in three new directions. First, the given and defined domains (Valentine et al. 2007) are used to link responsiveness (conceptually and empirically) to the increasingly important health system concepts of access to care and equity in access. The concept of equity used in this chapter was defined by a WHO working group with experts on human rights, ethics and equity. It is defined as the absence of avoidable or remediable differences among populations or groups defined socially, economically, demographically or geographically (WHO 2005).
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- Information
- Performance Measurement for Health System ImprovementExperiences, Challenges and Prospects, pp. 138 - 186Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
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