6533b870fe1ef96bd12cfd08

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Congestion analysis to evaluate the efficiency and appropriateness of hospitals in Sicily

Domenica MatrangaFrancesca Sapienza

subject

Output-congestionNational Health ProgramsCross-sectional studymedia_common.quotation_subjectEfficiencyEfficiency OrganizationalSettore MED/01 - Statistica MedicaOutcome Assessment Health CareHealth careData envelopment analysisHumansMedicineQuality (business)Operations managementSicilyQuality of Health Caremedia_commonNational healthHospitals Publicbusiness.industryHealth PolicyUndesirable outputHealth care deliveryCross-Sectional StudiesAppropriateness; Data envelopment analysis; Efficiency; Output-congestion; Undesirable outputs; Health PolicyAppropriatenebusinessInefficiencyData envelopment analysi

description

Over the past twenty years, important changes in the Italian National Health System have been made in order to obtain significant improvements in the efficiency, appropriateness and quality of health care delivery, while reducing health expenditure. In this paper we proposed a multidimensional approach to assess the impact of organization inappropriateness on the efficiency evaluation of hospitals in Sicily for the year 2009. This study was based on cross-sectional data for 116 (out of 129) short-term, acute-care hospitals. The analysis considered beds, physicians, nurses and other personnel as inputs, ordinary discharges and day-hospital admissions as desirable outputs and inappropriate discharges and day-hospitals as undesirable outputs of the health care process. We refer to output-congestion to measure the loss of desirable outcome, which is related to the simultaneous occurrence of inappropriateness. The main findings of our analysis indicate that most of the measured overall inefficiency of Sicilian hospitals could be attributed to congestion and pure technical inefficiency and that congestion was statistically different among hospital trusts, local public hospitals and for-profit hospitals and along the provinces. In Sicily, significant shares of inputs are still employed to supply inappropriate care, with the effect of producing less desirable health care outcomes than expected.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2014.12.012