Building a high-value health system /

"Conceptualizes a health system as a collection of interacting elements that are designed to produce outputs that lead to better population health. A system's elements both 'hang together' as a whole and continually interact and affect each other as they inter-operate to produce...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Atun, Rifat A.
Group Author: Moore, Gordon T.
Published: Oxford University Press,
Publisher Address: New York, NY :
Publication Dates: [2021]
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Subjects:
Summary: "Conceptualizes a health system as a collection of interacting elements that are designed to produce outputs that lead to better population health. A system's elements both 'hang together' as a whole and continually interact and affect each other as they inter-operate to produce their final result. Systems thinking is one of the most important disciplines enabling one to understand and characterize systems that display dynamic complexity. Systems thinking in health is a framework for seeing interrelationships and repeated events rather than individual activities, for discerning patterns of change, understanding responses to policies, and for deciphering human behavior within health systems and over time"--
Carrier Form: x, 235 pages : illustrations, forms ; 24 cm
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages [217]-223) and index.
ISBN: 9780197528549
0197528546
Index Number: RA418
CLC: R19
Call Number: R19/A886
Contents: Introduction to the health of a population -- Assessing the health system of a country -- How did we get here? : historical megatrends in health and medical care -- Developing a vision and goals -- Developing plans for change : a framework for designing a high-value health system -- Testing the change, improving the plan -- Insights from systems thinking -- Implementing a change : adoption and diffusion -- So what, who cares? : the wrap-up.