Structural Funds – looking towards 2014/20
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Transcript of Structural Funds – looking towards 2014/20
Structural Funds – looking towards 2014/20
• Context- an era of rapid and volatile change in healthcare
• What the ‘EU’ is doing about healthcare
• eHealth and Integration – changing the way healthcare is delivered
• Structural Funds - Cohesion Policy and Europe 2020 guidelines
• Conclusions
EU Cohesion Policy – investing in growth and jobs - Structural Funds are a pooled and shared resource – we are all stakeholders
The European Regional Development Funds (ERDF) strengthening economic, social and territorial cohesion by correcting inbalances between regionsThe European Social Funds (ESF) the EU’s main financial instrument for investing in people• Cohesion Policy structure and process – doing better by improving performance requirements and strengthening conditionalities:
• Tackling weaknesses in national policies, institutional frameworks• Stronger adherence to agreed milestones• Promoting integration e.g. multi-fund programmes• Results based strategic programming
Healthcare costs are rising faster than levels of funding available through taxation and insurance
• Ageing populations and the related rise in chronic disease
• Costly technological advances• Patient demand driven by better information and by
less healthy lifestyles• Legacy priorities and financing structures that are
not suited to today’s needs
Accumulated debt
SpendingAvailable resources
Increasing economic uncertainty
• The ‘great moderation’1980 – 2008A long incubator periodfor current health investment strategiesincluding SF
• 2008/9 V shaped recession
• 20010/11 the feared W double dip
• 2012 it now looks like an L shaped recession
A new era forSF (and general) financing strategy
• “The current economic crisis will bring about a period of budgetary constraints associated with the need to reduce large government deficits and put public finances back on the right track”
• “Depending on its severity, we will see public authorities contracting their spending on health services”
• We then face the age-gap pensions crisis – reduced income
The economic crisis will dominate health policy for the foreseeable future
GDP and health spending
EPC-Commission Report on Health Systems
“Spending less is not necessarily a disaster -- but spending less and trying to do things the same way is”
Europe is tending to repeat patterns of investment in healthcare from the 80’s and 90’s
The hospital-centred model has benefited from GDP stability and growth, easy credit and ring-fenced SF – it looks increasingly unsustainable
Rising government debtPPP based debtService squeezeIncreasing hospital deficits
• 5% to 10% of total patient numbers treated
• 40% to 75% of total healthcare costs
• High fixed costs, inflexible capital & business models that are often based on expectation of growing income
• Infrastructure is depreciating faster than it can be replaced• Access to capital is difficult and getting harder – there seems no plan B
Evidence strongly suggests the need for a more devolved, accessible and pluralistic systemeHealth is a critical factor in changing healthcare, but ---Hospital DNA is remarkably good at replication.
We need a new ‘business model’ for healthcare otherwise we will continue to medicalise ageing and chronic illness by default.
eHealth – further, faster, deeper - supported by bold political leadership to help create the tipping point for change.
Pathways for change – Hungarian Presidency, Gödölö 2011
Institutional / sector delivery
Whole systemsdisease management
• Coherence & quality• Population sensitivity• The patient as co-producer
• Healthcare reform through new models of integrated care
Changing focusWhat works and what doesn’t in the ‘new’ healthcare landscape ?
Integrated (care) pathways
Societal andeconomic benefit
New models of care
A clear EU Council policy lead
“Consider innovative approaches and models of care
responding to challenges and develop future long-term
health sector strategies with the aim of moving away from
hospital centered systems towards integrated care systems,
enhancing equitable access to high quality care and reducing
inequalities”
EU Council 6th June 2011
EU Council - The High level Reflection Process• At its meeting on 6 June 2011 the Council adopted conclusions "Towards
modern, responsive and sustainable health systems”. As discussed at:
• the Working Party on Public Health at Senior Level on 18 March 2011• informal meeting of Ministers of health held in Gödölö on 4-5 April 2011.
• To achieve the objective expressed above, the Council invited Member States and the Commission to initiate a reflection process under the auspices of the Working Party on Public Health at Senior Level aiming to identify effective ways of investing in health, so as to pursue modern, responsive and sustainable health systems”.
This decision also changes the boundary lines on subsidiarity in the health sector
EU Council High Level Reflection Process Two SF related sub-groups – a two year programme
1. “Enhancing the adequate representation of health in the framework of the Europe 2020 Strategy and in the process of the European Semester” – led by DG Sanco
1. “Defining success factors for the effective use of Structural Funds for health investments” - led by Hungary
• “Very early progress should be made on key deliverables”
• “Identifying “common sense success factors”, which should be present in advance as to guarantee effective investments from the Structural Funds in the health sector”
EuregioIII template Tactical vs strategic performance
The CONCEPT model of analysis
1. Highly successful 2. Inefficient / expensive
3. Wrong type of project 4. Complete failure
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StrategicSustainability
Tactical Delivery
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High adaptabilitymodels
Retro concepts
The ‘over-engineered’model
Limited concepts
Structural Fund processes – illustrative Euregio III evidence from past and current programmes
• A predisposition to mono-focus stand-alone projects• limitations of the process - including expertise
• A tendency towards ‘opportunistic’ emphasis on headlined elements of policy and guidance • Ticking the process boxes
• Tactical benefit is often at the expense of sustainable strategic value – sometimes justified by circumstance
• Problems of concept development and planning and implementation through weak stakeholder engagement and commitment
• Notable lack of relevant technical rigour e.g. lifecycle economics
Further key issues• “Strategic mimicry – strategy often loosely coupled with the problem and mainly focused on the elaboration of attractive project ideas often without an adequate or reliable evidence base” • “Lack of strategic integrative coordination” – masterplanning
• Return on Investment (ROI) - A ‘free goods’ culture – SF projects tend to compare badly with the ‘business sector’
• Over-ambition with regard to project expectation and delivery, including planning and implementation timetables
• Political ownership, leadership and continuity – and knowledge
Delivering Strategic successOECD, EU and USAID (etc) success criteria
In order to succeed strategically, five success criteria need to be satisfied. The project’s intended effect should achieve:
• Relevance - the effect should be achieved in time• Effectiveness - there should be measurable beneficial effect• Impact - the project should deliver affordable optimal value • Efficiency - the project should generate (benchmarked) cost value • Sustainability - the positive effects should be sustained, and• There should be no adverse effects
• These would seem to represent a useful set of “common sense success factors” – under discussion
• Euregio III - very few SF case studies met all five criteria
The high level reflection process provides a new window of opportunity to shape the future of healthcare in Europe
Applying SF to strike a balance between investments that offer societal benefit and those that relieve severe economic pressures is a difficult challenge
eHealth must deliver realisable added value that contributes to the twin aims of social cohesion and economic growth
WHO view of changing focus in healthcare
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Illustrative SF projects – issues of coordination, interdependencies and creating a sufficient tipping point for change
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eHealth – delivering the promise
eHealth – there often seems to be conflicting messages• “Smart innovation with ICT can help. The technology exists. We also do
not need more proof of concept. There is so much evidence already.” Neelie Kroes 3rd April 2012
• “Rigorous evaluation of eHealth is necessary to generate evidence and promote the appropriate integration and use of technologies” WHO Global eHealth Evaluation Meeting, Bellagio, September 2011
• “GPs urge ministers to rethink telehealth drive as low take-up in pilot area revealed” - “Show us the evidence for telehealth” BMJ January 2012
• “Large number of studies around the world (10,000+ published reports?) - Clinical / QoL benefits are being shown but robust economic evidence is limited” J. Barlow MIT/Harvard May 2012
In the absence of growth funding – healthcare reform will be increasingly dependent on resource redistribution – a continual process of disinvesting to reinvest – adaptable healthcare delivery models
Evidence has to be robust and credible to persuade all the stakeholders – this includes clinicians, the public and politicians
Achieving measurable return on investment A major weakness of capital projects – are there similar lessons for eHealth?
• EU Cohesion Policy - “Enhancing access to ICT • that there should measurable targets for outcome of
intervention in eHealth”
• eHealth is about making the workforce more effective and efficient and helping patients to help themselves
• de-facto – this leads to predicting, planning, financing and measuring on the basis of workforce led changes in performance outcomes and levels of patient engagement
• Euregio III• Prior and sustained engagement of all stakeholders• Prior and sustained commitment to change
The four mantras in healthcare today
• Prevention of ill health is a good thing
• Subsidiarity - getting (and keeping) people out of hospital - is also a good thing to do
• Integration - across ‘silos’ - will improve (and reform) healthcare efficiency and effectiveness
• Patient-centred care is the obvious way to improve quality
Will eHealth (“ever”) fully deliver on the
promises?
A trajectory of investment - towards REFORMA plea for coherence and justified balance between tactics and strategy
Automated data generation linked to clinical identifiers- EHR, DRG systems
Improving quality and relief of immediate cost pressures – e,prescribing, decision systems, administration
Hospital avoidance –telecare etc, the patient as co-producer of care
Integration through improved communication systemsbetween sectors - patient flow models
Whole systems integration through new models of care - resource redistribution - REFORM
ROI from illness prevention strategies
Tactical pressures
Complexity& time scalefor ROI
So what are we trying to achieve?Transformational change from hospital centricity to patient centricity Putting it into practice
The modular ‘hospital’
Local accessibilityClinical WP
Flow based planning
Dispersal
Integration
From silos to whole systems integrationThree pillars of reform
Effective &sustainable patient care
Workforce
Capital: Infrastructure and major technologies
eHealth
Integrated SF planning and investment
Evidence-based medicineModels of careEvidence-based designFinancing models
DataClinical governanceModels of carePatient engagement
The proposed more flexible “multi-fund” SF project option for 2014/20 is there for a purpose – but will create new challenges
Towards integration
Shared values need to transcend sectoral interests
& We must start talking a common language we can all understand
Conclusions – eHealth as a critical factor in ‘future health’ • We appear to have an unaffordable and unsustainable model of healthcare that will begin to have an adverse impact on society and the economy unless corrective action is taken – new strategies
• We had money to spend but failed to join up the dots, often because of partisan interests, tactical pressures and active inertia
• There is a clear EU Council policy lead, reflective of the economic climate - integration and reform. Proposed SF conditionality & process shifts are aimed at promoting and strengthening these objectives
• Health reform aimed at the twin targets of social cohesion and the economy will remain central to the forthcoming SF programme cycle – but we need to provide better impact evidence - results.
Health and Economicimprovement through the prism of eHealth
Safety
Quality
Accessibility
Reform
Equity
Social Cohesion
The Economy
INTGRATION
Annexes
• Cohesion Policy• Europe 2020• Fitting it together – how provisions and guidelines fit into
overarching health strategy• Other funding options
EU Structural Funds – annexes for later reading
Cohesion policy guidelines & Europe 2020 - HEALTH (per se) is not a thematic or flagship priority but is featured in specific contributing terms:
Cohesion Policy refers to:
•"The existence of a national or regional strategy for health ensuring access to quality health services and economic sustainability:
• contains coordinated measures to improve access to quality health services;
• contains measures to stimulate efficiency in the health sector, including deployment of effective innovative: technologies, service delivery models and infrastructure;
• contains a monitoring and review system.”
There is more• “A Member State or region has adopted a framework outlining available
budgetary resources for health care“
• Annex IV notes under Enhancing access to ICT “that there should measurable targets for outcome of intervention in eHealth”
• Under Promoting employment, active and healthy ageing is mentioned as a priority - as contributing to sustaining and improving the scale and scope of the employment pool
We might reasonably conclude that health has sufficient reference points within the Cohesion Policy to ensure access to SF.
But health will be in direct and vigorous competition from more obvious economy related priorities which may also be flagship initiatives – and then there are the conditionalities.
Europe 2020 – Specific references to ‘health’• Smart Growth
• the Innovation Union - the need to focus on challenges including healthy ageing.
• Digital agenda for Europe - promoting online health.
• Inclusive Growth
• the European platform against poverty – identify ways to ensure better access to health care systems" with parallel MS action.
• Sustainable growth
• "Fiscal consolidation and long-term financial sustainability will need to go hand in hand with important structural reforms, in particular of pension, health care, social protection and education systems”
• Resource Efficient Europe - the carbon agenda dimensions of capital and service strategy
The basis of a strategic framework for Health SF (1)
• Understanding the context
• The economic crisis – and impact on growth and employment
• Needs assessment and concept development
• undertake an assessment of adequacy and sustainability of social protection and pension systems, and identify ways to ensure better access to health care systems
• Strategic priorities - and policies
• Social - Equality of Access and Quality – integrated models of care
• Economic - Fiscal consolidation and long-term financial sustainability will need to go hand in hand with important structural reforms, in particular of (pension) health care
The basis of a strategic framework for Health SF (2)• Operational (tactical) measures
• Enhancing access to ICT - promoting online health• Healthy ageing programmes• Stimulating efficiency – effective innovation, technologies, service
delivery models, infrastructure
• Evaluation and accountability - an effective monitoring and review system
• Policies and programmes should relate – in measurable terms - to the underpinning objectives:• Growth – economic impact• Employment – direct and indirect opportunities and support• Social Cohesion – availability of healthcare – health equity
A case study of real life problems of eHealth project planning and implementation• The aim - improve health information processing and the evidence
base on a changing national epidemiological profile. Targets include facilitating information access for all healthcare professional groups and citizens, improving planning and management of healthcare infrastructure and services, and promoting the citizens’ active role in managing their health and healthcare.
• Project delayed by domestic stakeholders and the European Commission. The main reason - stakeholder consultation has not delivered clear, inclusive and well understood contractual arrangements among them as a basis for implementation
• the lack of domestic eHealth expertise,
• belated engagement of the IT industry,
• contested decision-making among stakeholders, and
• a wider national healthcare reform process.
Resolution – some immediate recommendations
• launching an initiative to enhance stakeholder consultation and redress the balance of contributions in project decisions;
• use full cost analysis methods to ensure eHealth services are affordable by all stakeholders;
• identifying experts to provide informed input to tenders in line with stakeholder consultation;
• closer collaboration among selected stakeholders to successfully complete pilot projects;
• proactive deliberation on using new technologies to extend the proposed eHealth infrastructure; and
• activating a programme of events to stimulate and sustain healthcare professional groups’ engagement and involvement.
andwas it the right concept at the right time?
Other substantive financing opportunities
• Public Private Partnerships - there is good evidence of opportunities for integrated models of service, eHealth and capital investment – and some notable successes• Coxa, Finland. RK, Germany, but• PPP match funding for SF is extremely difficult and risky
• Secondary bank support (companies are cash rich) • “In its lending activities, XXX Bank offers mid - and long-term investment and project
financing”• R&D and joint ventures in association with major players and SME’s
• But, it will require very significant uprating of:• Return on investment principles and practice• Rigorous risk assessment strategies
• Pension Funds – watch this space - but the criteria will be tough