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Waiting Time Policies in the Health Sector

What Works?

image of Waiting Time Policies in the Health Sector

Over the past decade, many OECD countries have introduced new policies to tackle excessive waiting times for elective surgery with some success. However, in the wake of the recent economic downturn and severe pressures on public budgets, waiting times times may rise again, and it is important to understand which policies work.  In addition, the European Union has introduced new regulations to allow patients to seek care in other member states, if there are long delays in treatment.   This book provides a framework to understand why there are waiting lists for elective surgery in some OECD countries and not in others. It also describes how waiting times are measured in OECD countries, which differ widely, and makes recommendations for best practice. Finally, it reviews different policy approaches to tackling excessive waiting times. Some countries have introduced guarantees to patients that they will not wait too long for treatment. These policies work only if they are accompanied by sanctions on health providers to ensure the guarantee is met or if they allow greater choice of health-care providers including the private sector. Many countries have also introduced policies to expand supply of surgical services, but these policies have generally not succeeded in the long-term in bringing down waiting times. Given the increasing demand for elective surgery, some countries have experimented with policies to improve priorisation of who is entitled to elective surgery. These policies are promising, but difficult to implement.

Anglais

United Kingdom

Waiting times for elective hospital treatment have traditionally been a very high political priority in the United Kingdom, and there have been numerous initiatives over the last twenty years designed to tackle them. The most successful was the system of waiting time targets, under which all National Health Service organisations were given very clear maximum waiting times.In England in 2009, a new NHS Constitution established a guarantee of a maximum wait of 18 weeks from initial referral to a specialist until eventual treatment. This has been accompanied by a shift of emphasis away from centrally specified targets towards patient choice.Scotland performs well in comparison to the other countries of the United Kingdom, but recent relaxation of the zero-tolerance approach to violations of the targets has been associated with deteriorating waiting times performance. Frequent revisions of the measurement of waiting times and the publication of increasingly complex statistics on performance make it difficult to track consistent trends. The ultimate aims of waiting times policy in Scotland have not been evaluated.

Anglais

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