Login / Signup

Standardising costs or standardising care? Qualitative evaluation of the implementation and impact of a hospital funding reform in Ontario, Canada.

Karen S PalmerAdalsteinn D BrownJenna M EvansHusayn MaraniKirstie K RussellDanielle MartinNoah M Ivers
Published in: Health research policy and systems (2018)
Implementation of QBPs in Ontario's hospitals depended on the interplay between three factors, namely complexity of changes required, internal capacity for organisational change, and availability and appropriateness of targeted external facilitators and supports to manage change. Variation in these factors across QBPs and hospitals suggests the need for more tailored and flexible implementation supports designed to fit all elements of the policy, rather than one-size-fits-all handbooks alone. Without such supports, hospitals may enact quick fixes aimed mainly at preserving budgets, rather than pursue evidence- and value-based changes in care management. Overestimating hospitals' change management capacity increases the risk of implementation failure.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • quality improvement
  • primary care
  • public health
  • palliative care
  • mental health
  • emergency department
  • smoking cessation
  • chronic pain