330 likes | 462 Views
System Perspectives on Prevention . Samantha Hobson Bushfire 2000 Lockhardt River. Professor Andrew Wilson Menzies Centre for Health Policy School of Public Health. Outline. The Value of Prevention System Perspectives.
E N D
System Perspectives on Prevention Samantha Hobson Bushfire 2000 Lockhardt River Professor Andrew Wilson Menzies Centre for Health Policy School of Public Health
Outline • The Value of Prevention • System Perspectives
Components of projected $161 billion increase in total health system and aged care expenditure, Australia 2003 to 2033 10 prevention = small impact on health care costs Qld CHO Report 2010
Annual Growth of Health Expenditure and GDP, Constant Prices 2001-02 to 2010-11 Health > GDP AIHW Aust Health Expenditure 2010-11
Opportunities for Better Care without Higher Cost? ? Importance in cost containment
Systems Perspectives • What is a Prevention System? • Health Systems Perspective on Prevention • Systems Thinking about doing Prevention • Modeling • Action Systems
Weaknesses Current Prevention ‘System’ • Reflects the broader health system • Fragmented • Loosely coordinated • Multiple and discontinuous funding sources • Largely communicable disease focussed • Largely health system focussed • Poor Continuity of Effort
Current Prevention ‘System’ Strengths • Committed Individuals • Existing infrastructure • Strong NGO sector • Flexibility thru necessity • History of Creativity
National Preventative Health Taskforce 2010 General Strategies • Shared responsibility – developing strategic partnerships • Act early and throughout life • Engage communities • Influence markets and develop connected and coherent policies • Reduce inequity through targeting disadvantage • Indigenous Australians – contribute to ‘Close the Gap’ • Refocus primary healthcare towards prevention
SUPPORTING INFRASTRUCTURE • Social marketing • Data, surveillance and monitoring • National research infrastructure • Workforce development • Future funding models for prevention National Preventative Health Taskforce 2010
Prevention System What else is needed? • New Capacities • New Partnerships • Different Ways of Thinking • New Knowledge • Dementia • Musculoskeletal Disease
Health System and Prevention • What can the health system do to better prevent disease and promote health? • Questions of Effectiveness and Efficiency in Health System Prevention Action • Individual, Group, Community, Population focus • How much Health $$ should be spent on Prevention? • What does Health control and regulate?
Critical Components Impact Up Stream Scalability Sustainability Effectiveness Longer Term Short Term Downsteam
Systems Thinking and Prevention – Better Understanding Complex Systems
Butland B et al. Foresight Tackling Obesities: Future Choices –Project report 2007.
Scenario Testing Interventions for Obesity • An individualistic, market-driven society that adopts a more long-term and sustainable view. • A society where social responsibilities are prioritised, and communities and Government implement plans to meet long-term challenges. • Asociety where communities take the lead and focus on tackling difficulties as they arise. • An individualistic, market-driven society that reacts to problems when and where they occur. Butland B et al. Foresight Tackling Obesities: Future Choices –Project Report 2007.
Butland B et al. Foresight Tackling Obesities: Future Choices –Project report 2007.
Butland B et al. Foresight Tackling Obesities: Future Choices –Project report 2007.
Complex Systems and Wicked Problems • No easy fix, no one strategy. • Likely to be lots of “failures”, need to learn from failures as well successes. • Need systematic and systemic approaches. • Need persistence – how do we institutionalise ongoing action? • Need to assess and minimise the potential for harm along the way.
The Ways of a Systems Thinker • Sees the whole picture • Changes perspectives to see new leverage points in complex systems • Looks for interdependencies • Considers how mental models create our futures • Pays attention and gives voice to the long-term • “Goes wide” (uses peripheral vision) to see complex cause and effect relationships • Finds where unanticipated consequences emerge • Sees oneself as part of, not outside, the system Source: “Systems Thinking Playbook” by Linda Booth Sweeney and Dennis Meadows
What does this mean? • Understand the Problem and Context (Diagnostic) • Identify Intervention Points and Options • Identify Potential Impact • (Effectiveness, Risks, Equity, Benefit-Cost) • Identify Potential Achievability under Different Settings • (Political, Investment Level, Scaling, Dose) • Understand the Players and Interactions • Implement, Learn, Change • (understanding, action, outcomes)
Research Opportunities • The Value of Prevention • How do we value prevention rather then health care avoidance? • How do we communicate that value to the community and decision makers? • System Perspectives • How can we better implement what we know works in prevention? Learning from Doing. • Why doesn’t it work they way we think it should in real life?
Research Opportunities • The Prevention System • What are the elements of successful prevention system(s)? • What are the options for prevention – individual, community, population – programs, regulation, legislation? • Driving Change • How do we become more effective influencers? • Consumerism, choice and the prevention paradox?
Thank-you Questions Lena Nyadbi 2013 “Dayiwul Lirlmim” (Barramundi Scales). Musee du quai Branly, Paris.