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Scientific article 1. DEC 2022
  • Management and implementation
  • The Social Sector
  • Health Care
  • Management and implementation, The Social Sector, Health Care

National clinical guidelines and treatment centralization do not guarantee consistency in healthcare delivery

A mixed-methods study of wet age-related macular degeneration treatment in Denmark

Authors:

  • Anna Kollerup Iversen
  • Sarah Wadmann
  • Toke Bek
  • Jakob Kjellberg
  • Management and implementation
  • The Social Sector
  • Health Care
  • Management and implementation, The Social Sector, Health Care
Modelfoto: Cathrine Ertmann/VIVE
  • Sarah Wadmann

    Senior Researcher, Master of public health, PhD

    +45 61 82 77 35
    sawa@vive.dk
As clinical practice variation has been problematized as a symptom of suboptimal care and inefficient resource spending, consistency in the delivery of healthcare is a recurring policy goal. We examine a case where the introduction of a new treatment is most likely to provide consistency in healthcare delivery because it was introduced with a national clinical practice guideline representing consensus about best clinical practice among leading clinicians, and because care delivery was highly centralized to few high-volume treatment units. Despite the consensus on best clinical practice and care centralization, this study shows pronounced regional variation in patient outcomes and treatment costs that increased over time. Using a mixed-methods design, we find that the lack of consistency in care was largely unrelated to patient-specific characteristics, but seemed to reflect structural differences in the regional organization and financing of healthcare delivery. We conclude that the value of clinical practice guidelines is undermined when structural barriers limit the ability of clinicians and clinical managers to scale up treatment, and that some degree of decentralization may be a tool to maintain treatment intensity when the treatment effect is dependent on a high treatment intensity.

Authors

  • Anna Kollerup IversenSarah WadmannToke BekJakob Kjellberg

About this publication

  • Financed by

    Novo Nordisk Fonden
  • Published in

    Health Policy
VIVE – The Danish Centre for Social Science Research provides knowledge that contributes to developing the welfare society and strengthening quality development, efficiency enhancement and governance in the public sector, both in municipalities, regions and nationally.
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