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Magnitude of terminological bias in international health services research: a disambiguation analysis in mental health.

Mencía Ruiz Gutiérrez-ColosíaP HinckJ SimonA KonnopkaC FischerS MayerV BrodszkyL Hakkart-van RoijenS EversA ParkH H KönigW HollingworthJ A Salinas-Pereznull nullL Salvador-Carulla
Published in: Epidemiology and psychiatric sciences (2022)
Service terminology is a source of systematic bias in health service research, and certainly in mental healthcare. The magnitude of the problem is substantial. This finding has major implications for the international comparability of resource use in health economics, quality and equality research. The approach presented in this paper contributes to minimise differentiation between services by taking into account key features such as target population, care setting, main activities and type and number of professionals among others. This approach also contributes to support financial incentives for effective health promotion and disease prevention. A detailed analysis of services in terms of cost measurement for economic evaluations reveals the necessity and usefulness of defining services using a coding system and taxonomical criteria rather than by 'text-based descriptions'.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • health promotion
  • mental health
  • affordable care act
  • primary care
  • smoking cessation
  • quality improvement
  • palliative care
  • young adults