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Published byCalvin Mason Modified over 8 years ago
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Developing New Approaches to Measuring NHS Outputs and Productivity Andrew Street Research team: Diane Dawson, Hugh Gravelle, Mary O’Mahony, Andrew Street, Martin Weale, Adriana Castelli, Rowena Jacobs, Paul Kind, Pete Loveridge, Stephen Martin, Philip Stevens, Lucy Stokes
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Structure of talk 1.Define some terms 2.Describe conventional approach to measurement of NHS productivity for National Accounts 3.Specify improved productivity indices for NHS Value weighted output index Cost weighted output index 4.Estimate the cost weighted output index 5.Calculate productivity growth 1998-2004
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Productivity, efficiency & welfare Production function Welfare indifference curve
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Productivity growth Production function year t Production function year t+1 C D
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2000 Blair’s announcement to increase NHS expenditure by 7% per annum for seven years Department of Health / Treasury need to demonstrate value for money Political Context
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Total factor productivity growth 1.Construct index of output growth Measure of the change in the valuable things that the health system produces 2.Construct index of input growth Measure of the change in the quantity and quality of labour, intermediate and capital inputs
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Challenges in measuring government output 1.The output of the public sector is often difficult to describe or measure. 2.It is difficult to measure the quality of public sector output. 3.There are no prices so we need to weight different outputs to aggregate them into a single index.
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The Output=Input Convention Output is measured as public sector expenditure. Circular and self-justifying. Implies no productivity change. Reductions in expenditure because of technological improvements reduce “output”.
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Direct Volume Measurement Method for 2006 EU National Accounts Output is the “quantity of health care received by patients … … in terms of completed treatments … … adjusted to allow for the qualities of the services provided” (Eurostat handbook 1995)
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Simple indices
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Value-weighted index
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Cost-weighted index Improvements 1.Better definition of x for hospital activity – Healthcare Resource Groups 2.Improved coverage: from j=12 to j=2,060
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Components of output index
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Raw growth rates – hospital sector
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Raw growth rates – non-hospital sector
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Cost weighted output index (Laspeyres form) (1) NHS outputs in national accounts Drawbacks 2.Using costs as weights assumes Efficient allocation of resources Costs reflect social value 1.The NHS produces more than merely activities Need to include change in quality
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Cost and health outcome weights
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Quality Adjusted Life Years
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QALYs - Technical Change
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Quality Adjusted Life Years Probability of surviving treatment j at time t+1 Health status before treatment Discounted life expectancy: 1.5% Monetary value of a QALY: £30,000 Health status after treatment
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Cost weighted activity index
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30 day survival rates Changes in survival rates used to scale activity Improvements in survival represent increases in output
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Waiting times … … can reduce patient welfare because : Patients dislike waiting Waiting may be detrimental to health
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Output Growth: Total NHS
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Numbers employed in NHS
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Labour Input Growth: Total NHS
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TFP Growth: Total NHS
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Value for Money? 1. Technological implications of NICE guidance 2. Large salary increases – consultants and GPs now best paid in Europe - £600m + £1.2bn. 3. Staff re-grading - £500m. 4. Re-organisation rather restructuring of incentives.
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