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Public Health Priority Setting

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Title: Public Health Priority Setting


1
Public Health Priority Setting
  • Likwang Chen
  • Centre for Health Policy Research and Development
  • Institute of Population Health Sciences
  • National Health Research Institutes
  • Taiwan
  • February 16, 2009

2
Information and evidence
  • Better information and evidence create better
    opportunities for better public health policies.
  • Lack of information and evidence causes
    under-investment in public health.
  • The World Health Report 2008

3
Priority and sustainability
  • No single top priority
  • Incremental improvement
  • Lasting effort

4
Goals of priority-setting
  • To improve efficiency in producing health
  • To reduce inequality (inequity) in health

5
Major targets of public health policies priority
health conditions
  • High-burden diseases, such as the ten leading
    causes of death
  • Vulnerable groups and stages of life courses,
    such as the poor, the disabled, the aborigines,
    the elderly, and children

6
Taiwans ten leading causes of death in 2007
  • 1. Malignant neoplasms
  • 2. Heart disease
  • 3. Cerebrovascular disease
  • 4. Diabetes mellitus
  • 5. Accidents and adverse effects
  • 6. Pneumonia
  • 7. Chronic liver disease and cirrhosis
  • 8. Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome and nephrosis
  • 9. Suicide
  • 10. Hypertensive disease

7
Focus population in the Taiwan Healthy People
2020
  • Child youth
  • Elderly population
  • Indigenous groups
  • Socially or economically disadvantaged population
  • People with disabilities

8
Main purposes of public health policies
  • To reduce
  • excess loss of life expectancy or
    quality-adjusted life expectancy due to premature
    death (loss of valuable lives, waste of valuable
    social resource)
  • unnecessary financial burden to National Health
    Insurance/Services (loss of quality of life,
    waste of valuable social resource)
  • unjustifiable inequality in health status/health
    behaviour (unfulfilled chances of improvement)

9
Excess loss of life expectancy or
quality-adjusted life expectancy
  • Modifiable health risks (environment and
    lifestyle)
  • pollutants
  • occupational hazards
  • unhealthy lifestyle
  • lack of injury protections
  • Main sources of knowledge for formulating
    policies
  • the literature
  • administrative and survey data ---
    cross-sectional and longitudinal

10
Unnecessary financial burden to National Health
Insurance/Services
  • Avoidable hospitalisations preventable through
    primary prevention (health risks mentioned above)
    and/or primary health care
  • acute upper-respiratory infections, lower
    respiratory infection, gastroenteritis and
    dehydration, asthma and chronic bronchitis, and
    acute injury and poisoning --- Agency for
    Healthcare Research and Quality Hakim and
    Bye,2001,Pediatrics
  • Main sources of knowledge for formulating
    policies
  • the literature
  • administrative and survey data ---
    cross-sectional and longitudinal

11
Unjustifiable inequality in health status /
health behaviour
  • Ameliorable inequality
  • inequality among areas with similar
    socio-economic conditions
  • Main sources of knowledge for formulating
    policies
  • administrative and survey data --- cross-sectional

12
Excess loss of life expectancy or
quality-adjusted life expectancy --- Examples in
studies by Professor J.D. Wang and his colleagues
13
Gain from removing preventable health risks
  • Injury protection
  • Utility gained from the helmet law was 6240
    quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) in Taipei in
    1998.
  • Environmental protection
  • In 1992, Taiwan had 649 female workers in 23
    manufacturing factories with lead-acid battery
    exposure. Utility from implementing an effective
    national industrial hygiene program to reduce
    these female workers blood lead by 15 µg/dl is
    124 QALYs for their offspring utility from a
    program reducing the level by 10 µg/dl is 89
    QALYs.

14
Unnecessary financial burden to National Health
Insurance/Services --- A case of preventable
hospitalisations in children under 2 years of age
under Taiwans National Health Insurance
15
Method
  • Data Taiwans National Health Insurance data for
    children born between July 1, 2003 and June 30,
    2004
  • Design For each childs first two years of life,
    the frequencies of hospitalisations for acute
    upper-respiratory infections, lower respiratory
    infection, gastroenteritis and dehydration,
    asthma and chronic bronchitis, and acute injury
    and poisoning, and the corresponding expenditures
    were calculated the outcomes were compared
    between poor children and their better-off
    counterparts.
  • Statistical methods the negative binomial
    regression and the log-linear regression

16
Preliminary findings
  • The probability of having preventable
    hospitalisations in the first two years of life
    for poor children was 29, while that for
    better-off children was 19.
  • The average length of stay due to preventable
    hospitalisations for poor children was 4 times of
    that for better-off children (4 days versus 1
    day).
  • On average, a poor childs NHI expenditure on
    preventable hospitalisations was 3 times of that
    for a better-off child (16,619 Taiwan dollars
    versus 5,028 Taiwan dollars).
  • Excess use of inpatient care for poor children is
    mainly for two disease types lower respiratory
    infection, and acute injury and poisoning.

17
Unjustifiable inequality in health status/health
behaviour --- A case regarding priority public
health problems in Taitung County
18
Method
  • Data Taiwans National Health Interview Survey
    in 2002
  • Design Comparison of the 95 confidence
    intervals of various indicators reflecting health
    status and health behaviour among Taitung and
    other counties with similar socio-economic
    conditions (Yun-Lin County, Chia-Yi County,
    Hua-Lian County, Ping-Tung County, and Peng-Hu
    County)

19
Findings
  • Priority health status problems in Taitung
    included hypertension, heart disease, stroke,
    asthma, and osteoporosis.
  • Priority health care problems in Taitung
    included care for hypertension and diabetes and
    utilization of preventive care.
  • Priority health behaviour problems in Taitung
    included tobacco use, alcohol use, and betel nut
    chewing.
  • In particular, females in Taitung had worse
    conditions than females in other counties.

20
An example of guessing what consequences a health
policy will bring about --- Health information
dissemination for reducing the prevalence
of betel nut chewing in Taitung
21
Central value of health policy research
  • Identifying the causes of a phenomenon that is
    worthy of attention --- So, experimental research
    design is important.
  • Predicting the consequences of a health policy
    --- So, simulation methods are substantially
    helpful.

22
Random experiments and Natural experiments
23
Difficulties for simulating health policy effects
due to data availability in the real world
--- Quite often we can just guess what
consequences a health policy will bring about
indirectly
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Better public health priority setting
30
Keys to success
  • Capacity of conducting systematic research and
    accumulating evidence
  • Leadership --- sciences, arts and ethics

31
Beyond health sector activities
  • Recommendations from the Commission on Social
    Determinants of Health of WHO
  • Improve daily living conditions
  • Tackle the inequitable distribution of power,
    money and resources
  • Measure and understand the problem and assess the
    impact of action

32
Beyond-local-scale initiatives
  • Public health interventions beyond the level of
    local government (examples in The World Health
    Report 2008)
  • Altering individual behaviours and lifestyles
  • Tackling hygiene and the broader determinants of
    health
  • Secondary prevention (screening diseases, etc.)
  • such as taxation of alcohol and tobacco, food
    safety regulation, environmental protection, etc.

33
Accountability and trust
  • Rapid response
  • Participation
  • Deliberation
  • Revision
  • This is not only about ethics. This is an
    important factor for success, especially in
    democratic societies.

34
  • Thank you for listening!
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