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Health and economic outcomes for founding medicine on a comparable value: experiences from the VOICE Community in breast and lung cancer

Quality of care initiatives have risen among cancer healthcare providers, and policymakers attempt to systematically measure and improve the quality of cancer care. Cancer is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in Europe. Although cancer survival rates have considerably increased in recent ye...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal of integrated care 2023-12, Vol.23 (S1), p.409
Main Authors: García-Lorenzo, Borja, López de Subijana, Ania Gorostiza, Alayo, Itxaso, Fullaondo-Zabala, Ane
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Quality of care initiatives have risen among cancer healthcare providers, and policymakers attempt to systematically measure and improve the quality of cancer care. Cancer is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in Europe. Although cancer survival rates have considerably increased in recent years, its significant impact on the quality of life and healthcare utilization remains. Value-based healthcare (VBHC) proposes that health systems need to be managed in terms of outcomes that matter to patients, connecting health and economic outcomes to determine the value of the healthcare. Benchmarking across healthcare centres might provide support decision-making on what matter most to patients, focusing on lessons learned from best performers, and moving toward a high-value healthcare delivery system. This paper aims to provide a benchmarking of healthcare and economic outcomes across ten hospitals in order to generate better healthcare practices. The VOICE community is a European hospital cluster addressing the VBHC in breast and lung cancer from theory into practice. The community collects Clinical-Related (CROs), Patient-Related (PROs), Care Process-related (CPRs) and Economic-related (EROs). Two cohorts of patients diagnosed with breast (n=690; 6-hospitals) and lung cancer (n=318; 4-hospitals) in 2019 were recruited with a 6-month follow-up according to ICHOM’s reference guides. For each cohort, a clinical pathway was designed according to clinical practice guidelines; PROs, CROs and CPRs variables were collected according to the ICHOM standard sets; and a standard set of economic variables was designed using a bottom-up approach. Finally, patient archetypes were identified using clustering techniques and clinical expert opinion, and the definition of a set of benchmarking indicators followed a consensus DELPHI methodology. Benchmarking was performed using descriptive analyses and regression models controlling for patient archetypes, clinical and socio-demographic variables. A benchmarking digital solution was provided to clinicians and healthcare managers.  Breast (43) and lung (46) indicators were defined and classified into health outcome (CROs and PROs), CPRs, ERs and case-mix indicators. In breast cancer, significant differences across centres were found in PROs, CPRs and EROs indicators. Quality of life, body image and social and economic function showed significant differences. Time from diagnosis to treatment and the appropriate rate of sentinel
ISSN:1568-4156
1568-4156
DOI:10.5334/ijic.ICIC23149