The globalization of managerial innovation in health care

The globalization of managerial innovation in health care

Kimberly, John
Pouvourville, G. de
D'Aunno, Thomas

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In 1983, the first patient classification system to be used on a national basis, the Diagnosis Relate Groups (DRGs), was adopted as part of the ProspectivePayment System in the United States. This system caught the attention of health policy makers in other countries, and a number of them began to implement similar approaches. What motivated them to adopt these systems? What similarities and differences were there among their experiences in implementing these systems? What can we learn about introducing change into national health systemsby comparing their experiences? The Globalization of Managerial Innovation inHealth Care answers these and other questions by examining patient classification systems in fifteen different countries throughout the world. The result is a remarkable collection of case studies of how change can be introduced effectively into national health systems as well as a careful synthesis of what can be learned from them. INDICE: List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction Thomas d'Aunno, John R. Kimberly and Gerard de Pouvourville; 1. Origins of DRGs in the United States: a technical, political and cultural story Jon Chilingerian; 2. From Casemix in the United Kingdom: from development to plans Steve Sutch; 3. Casemix implementation in Portugal Ceu Mateus; 4.From naive hope to realistic conviction: DRGs in Sweden Rickard Lindquist; 5.Casemix in Denmark Annette Soerberg Roed, Hanne Sjuneson and Poul Erik Hansen; 6. DRGS in France Xaviere Michelot and Jean Marie Rodrigues; 7. Introductionand use of DRGs in Belgium M.-C. Closon, F. H. Roger France and J. Perelman; 8. DRG-finals in Germany: introduction of a comprehensive, prospective DRG-payment system until 2009 Gunther Neubauer; 9. Casemix in Switzerland Herve Guillain; 10. The first decade of Case Mix in Italy Paolo Tedeschi; 11. Casemix development and implementation in Australia S. J. Duckett; 12. Diagnosis procedure combination: the Japanese approach to Casemix Shinya Matsuda; 13. Casemix inSingapore Chien Earn Lee and Lim Eng Kok; 14. Experiences with the application of the DRG principle in Hungary Julia Nagy, Csaba Dozsa and Imre Boncz; 15. Case Mix systems - past, present, and future: rhe Canadian wxperience Sandra Mitchell and Andre Lalonde; 16. Conclusions: the global diffusion of Casemix Thomas D'Aunno, John R. Kimberly and Gerard de Pouvourville; Index.

  • ISBN: 978-0-521-71198-2
  • Editorial: Cambridge University
  • Encuadernacion: Rústica
  • Páginas: 394
  • Fecha Publicación: 01/11/2008
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés