Title: ADVANCED HEALTH LEADERSHIP FORUM CURRICULUM
1ADVANCED HEALTH LEADERSHIP FORUM CURRICULUM
- 9-17 JULY 2004
- Universitat Pompeu Fabra
- PART I
2FRIDAY July 9 1700-1900 Arrival and Transfer
from the Airport (on request only) 1900-2100
Registration and Informal cocktail reception at
hotel
3SATURDAY July 10 INTRODUCTION 900-1000
Welcome (Shortell, López-Casasnovas, Scheffler)
Presentation of the program (López-Casasnovas,
Shortell, Scheffler, and Kellogg) Introduction
to main themes, tie-in to Berkeley days, and
schedule. Introduction of participants
background, strategic challenges, professional
profiles and expectations of program.
4INTERNATIONAL LESSONS AND INNOVATIONS
1000-1030 Break 1030- 1230
López-Casasnovas and Scheffler Global framework
for health care systems. Overview of the program
1230-1330 Lunch 1330-1430 Health
expenditure data and costs worldwide, OECD
countries and USA 1430-1445 Coffee break
1445- 1715 Evidence-based health policies
what we have learned from different countries and
current innovations A. Preker (World Bank), J.
Martinez (HLSP Consulting Group). Discussion
panel Shortell, Scheffler and López-Casasnovas
2000 Welcome dinner
5SUNDAY July 11 Morning off ASSESSMENT OF
PRIORITIES AND PURCHASES 1400-1530 JL Pinto
Priority setting in health systems Defining and
clarifying the benefit package, rationing and
queues. Coffee-break 1545-1630 Guest
Speaker J. Pons. Catalan Agency for Health
Technology Assessment Technology Innovations in
Europe and the use of assessment tools.
1630-1715 Guest Speaker E. Nord. Senior
Researcher at the National Institute of Public
Health. Oslo. Norway. (Consultant to the
Norwegian Drug Administration in the development
of guidelines for pharmacoeconomic evaluations in
Norway). Strategies in Priority Setting a case
study. 2100 Dinner-Speaker P Littlejohns The
National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE)
experience from UK.
6MONDAY July 12 IMPROVING AND SUSTAINING HEALTH
SYSTEM PERFORMANCE 900-1030 V. Ortún and
N.Mas (IESE Business School) How to design and
improve public health systems (Part 1)
1030-1100 Break 1100-1230 Ortún and N.
Mas How to sustain performance of public health
systems (Part 2) 1230-1500 Lunch at Hotel
Catalonia Select a topic tables with different
faculty on different topics for detailed
discussion. 1530-1715 Guest speaker E.
Mossialos. Comparing Health Care Systems
Performance by asking consumers.
7TUESDAY July 13 LIFE STYLES AND CONSUMER
BEHAVIOR 900-1030 Rafael Bengoa. WHO Geneve
Integrating public health and health care
policies. 1030-1100 Break 1100-1230
Philip Berman (EHMA) The European Union and
Health Services. 1230-1400 Lunch and guest
speaker M. Garcia Barbero. Life and health Care
lessons from Europe. WHO 1800-2000 Barcelona
Tour Life-styles related tour (may choose walk
or bike ride). 2000 Dinner in Barceloneta
8WEDNESDAY July 14 REGULATION AND COMPETITION
THE PHARMACEUTICAL MARKET 900-1030
Puig-Junoy. To what extent does regulation of
the pharmaceutical sector affect innovation and
competition? Enlargement of the EU dangers and
opportunities. 1030-1100 Coffee-Break
1100-1230 Panel Discussion J. Rovira (World
Bank) and Panel discussion J. Sturchio (CEO for
MSD-Europe) and E. Castellón (former deputy
Minister of the Spanish Health Department)
Strategies for improving access to drugs for
Lesser Developed Countries. 1300 Lunch
Speaker Octavi Quintana. (European Union).
Biomedical research and its impact in Health
Services. The European Experience.
9HEALTH INSURANCE 1800-1900 Ibern and
Zweifel. Health Insurance Market Structure
and Performance 1930-2030 Zweifel and Ibern
Moral Hazard, Copayment and Patient Empowerment
2100 Speaker Dinner Gillian Morgan, CEO of
NHS Confederation. United Kingdom. Public and
private management strategies in a Public
environment.
10THURSDAY July 15 PUBLIC vs PRIVATE 900 - 1030
A. Precker Public-Private mix of health
insurance What is working? Introductory
comments 1100 - 1230 López-Casasnovas
Public-private Partnerships in National Health
Services R Scheffler The Czech privatization
experiment 1300 - 1400 Lunch in one of the
visits 1400 - 1700 Field Trip to a Public
High-Tech Hospital (Sant Pau) and to a Private
Hospital (Centro Médico Teknon). S. Ondategui.
(CRES member). 1730-1900 Individual meetings
or phone calls with project consultants, as
available or part II discussion with program
directors re project questions
11FRIDAY July 16 ADDRESSING EQUITY 900-1030
M. Rodríguez Equity in the financing and
provision of health care services concepts,
measurements and international evidence. 1030
1100 Break 1100-1230 Rodríguez and E.
Jané (International Consultant) and panel
discussion Tackling inequalities in health
what is being done, what is working? 1300
Lunch and guest speaker J. García Vargas (Former
Spanish Minister of Health) How does a health
minister amalgamate social concerns and empirical
evidence about equity, and translate it into
policy measures to address it? 1600-1730
Adhoc group discussions by topic. 2000 Final
Dinner Sala-i-Martin Health Opportunities
Worldwide
12SATURDAY July 17 900-1000 Evaluation of
Barcelona session and suggestions for Berkeley
session. 1000-1100 Presentation of
participants project plans, participant
comments/questions and final assignment of
consultants. 1100-1200 Discussions of
projects with the programs directors, as needed
1200 End of Barcelona meeting.
13University of California, Berkeley 7-15
JANUARY 2005 Part II
14FRIDAY January 7 500-800pm Arrival and
informal reception
15SATURDAY January 8 830-900 Continental
breakfast 900-1000am Welcome Shortell and
Lopez-Casasnovas Introduction to themes of
Program, tie-in to Barcelona days, and schedule
Shortell, Scheffler and Lopez-Casasnovas
1000-1030 Break 1030am-1200 Shortell and
Chatman Leading change and leveraging culture
in implementing health policies and health
systems change
16- 1200- 100 Lunch Break
- 100-200 Shortell and Chatman continued
- 200-215 Break
- 215-315 Lopez-Casasnovas Demographic changes
in the new millennium and how to deal with them - 630 Gala Welcome Dinner, Guest speaker, Harvey
Feinberg, MD, MPH, President, U.S. Institute of
Medicine The Future of American Healthcare
17SUNDAY January 9 HEALTH CARE PAYMENT AND
FINANCING SCHEMES 900-1030 am Ibern, Gertler
and Murray Ross, PhD Provider payment mechanisms
and incentives for minimizing costs 1030-1100
Break 11-1230 Hal Luft, UCSF Putting it all
together Designing IT, Health professional mix
and economic incentives to facilitate more
cost-effective, quality care
181230-130 Lunch 130-230pm Scheffler and
Ibern Mental Health and Long term care--how to
cover, how to finance them 230-245 Break
245-345 Ellwood Innovative health care
budgeting and dealing with rising costs 630
Dinner, Guest Speaker Molly Coye The Future of
Technology What you should be planning for
19MONDAY January 10 ASSESSMENT OF POLICY AND
TECHNOLOGY 900am-1030 am Teh-Wei Hu How to
request and interpret policy analyses
1030-1100 Break 11-12 Hu and Rundall
Post-implementation evaluation Doing it
right 130-230pm Gertler and Jeff Rideout ?
Information technology (IT) in consumer
selection and provider delivery State of the art
and assessing IT performance. 230-330 Penhoet
The future of biotechnology and its impact 600
Fun dinner in San Francisco
20TUESDAY January 11 INTEGRATING PAYORS AND
PROVIDERS THE CRUCIAL CONNECTIONS 830-1030
Breakfast Speaker Jamie Robinson Innovations in
Health Insurance-Provider Connections. 1100-
1200 Shortell Promoting and enhancing the
performance of Integrated Health
Systems 100pm-430pm Field Trip to Kaiser
Permanente Tour and discussions 630 Dinner,
Guest Speaker Kenneth W. Kizer, MD,MPH The
transformation of the Veterans Administration
health care system. A success story based on
implementing quality management, and other
financial and organizational changes.
21WEDNESDAY January 12 QUALITY 9-1000
Shortell Requirements for sustaining ongoing
health system quality. Lessons from U.S, New
Zealand, United Kingdom, Australia and elsewhere
what is working? 1000-1100 Quality case study
from Steve Shortell 1130-1200 BREAK 1200-
100 Guest speaker Kenneth W. Kizer, MD MPH
Protocol development and evidence-based
medicineAn international progress report on
cost-effective implementation 100-330
Luncheon and guest speaker David Lawrence MD,
Retired CEO and Chairman of the Board, Kaiser
Foundation Health Plan, Inc. and Hospitals
Designing for Quality
22THURSDAY January 13 LEADERSHIP AND
CONSUMERISM 900-1030 Rundall and Ortún
Evidence-based Management of Health Organizations
and Health Systems 1030-1100 Break 1100-
1200 Chatman Improving leadership capabilities
in health organizations 130-230 Raube and
Don Kemper consumer choice, voice and
accountability How to structure these for
effective use 230-330 Kemper The 21st
century patient informed (with evidenced-based
information), involved, and in the middle of
patient-centered care.
23FRIDAY January 14 900Am- 400pm Participant
project presentations. Faculty coodinators
Ortun, Lopez-Casasnovas,Scheffler, Raube Dinner
and Speaker Leonard Schaeffer CEO, Wellpoint
What we have learned from different models of
managed care and whats next.
24SATURDAY January 15 900am-1200 pm and 100-
230 Participant Project presentations. Faculty
coordinators Ortun, Lopez-Casasnovas, Scheffler,
Raube 230pm-330pm Program evaluation and
awards celebration