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Population Health Monitoring, 1st ed. 2019 Climbing the Information Pyramid

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Verschuuren Marieke, van Oers Hans

Couverture de l’ouvrage Population Health Monitoring

This timely volume presents an in-depth tour of population health monitoring?what it is, what it does, and why it has become increasingly important to health information systems across Europe. Introductory chapters ground readers in the structures of health information systems, and the main theoretical and conceptual models of population health monitoring. From there, contributors offer tools and guidelines for optimum monitoring, including best practices for gathering and contextualizing data and for disseminating findings, to benefit the people most affected by the information. And an extended example follows the step-by-step processes of population health monitoring through a study of health inequalities, from data collection to policy recommendations.

Included in the coverage:

·         Structuring health information: frameworks, models, and indicators

·         Analysis: contextualization of process and content

·         Knowledge translation: key concepts, terms, and activities

·         Health inequality monitoring: a practical application of population health monitoring

·         Relating population health monitoring to other types of health assessments

·         Population health monitoring: strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats

A robust guide with international implications for an emerging field, Population Health Monitoring is a salient reference for public health experts working in the field of health information as well as post-graduate public health students and public health policymakers.      

"In this comprehensive and easy to read volume, Verschuuren and van Oers, accompanied by other specialists in the field, present a fresh and thoroughly researched contribution on the discipline of population health monitoring. They critically analyse and describe the phases, functions and approaches to population health monitoring but far more importantly, the discipline is positioned within the wider domains of public health, health policy and health systems. The book is definitely highly recommended reading for students of public health and health services management but is also a useful refresher course for public health practitioners."

Natasha Azzopardi Muscat, President, European Public Health Association

Chapter 7 of this book is available open access under a CC BY 3.0 IGO license at link.springer.com

Chapter 8 of this book is available open access under a CC BY 3.0 IGO license at link.springer.com
Chapter 1: Introduction [Marieke Verschuuren (RIVM) & Hans van Oers (RIVM)]
  • Definition, scope and role of population health monitoring
  • Underlying concepts: the information pyramid, health information chain, policy cycle
  • Illustration of how good monitoring can steer effective policy making by means of one or two elaborated case studies 
  • Aims of the book
Chapter 2: Health Information Systems [Bernd Rechel (WHO Observatory on health systems), Nicole Rosenkoetter (NRW Centre for Public Health, Germany) Marieke Verschuuren, Hans van Oers]
  • Requirements for health information systems (based in WHO guidelines and other relevant sources)
  • The current situation in Europe (based on health system in transition (HiT reports and other relevant sources)
  • Assessing and improving health information systems, the need for health information strategies
  • Health information systems at different geographical levels (local, regional, national, international): their links and specific requirements
Chapter 3: Conceptual Models for Public Health Monitoring [Arpana Verma (University of Manchester), Peter Achterberg (RIVM), Henk Hilderink (RIVM)]
  • Conceptual models for public health monitoring (Lalonde, Whitehead and Dahlgren, input-process-output, etc.)
  • From a conceptual model to indicator selection; selection/quality criteria, what makes a good indicator?
  • Indicator work at the international level and underlying concepts
Chapter 4: Data Sources [Ivo Rakovac (WHO-Euro), someone from Eurostat, someone from OECD, Lany Slobbe (RIVM)]
  • Different types of data sources useful for population health monitoring and their strengths and limitations
  • Data linkage
  • EHRs, big data, and other  current developments
Chapter 5: Knowledge Synthesis [Nancy Hoeymans (RIVM), Casper Schoemaker (RIVM), Henk Hilderink, international forecasting expert]
  • From data to information, e.g. trend analyses, benchmarking, ranking, comparing population groups, comparing geographical areas, and their pros & cons and requirements
  • From information to knowledge, e.g. linking information on determinants with information on health outcomes, linking information on health outcomes with information on the (cost)effectiveness of interventions, and their pros & cons and requirements
  • Modeling, forecasting and foresight exercises:  typology, strengths and limitations, requirements for quantitative (data, models) and qualitative approaches (stakeholder involvement, …)
Chapter 6: Health Reporting [Marja van Bon (Trimbos Institute, the Netherlands), Hans van Oers,  Marieke Verschuuren]
  • Definition, link with information pyramid, role in policy cycle
  • Quality criteria for health reporting (content, process, presentation and communication)
  • The importance of stakeholder involvement, co-creation
  • The digital revolution in health reporting
Chapter 7: Knowledge Transfer [David Hunter (Durham University), Rosemary Rushmer (Durham University), Tanja Kuchenmüller/Tim Nguyen (WHO-Euro)]
  • The challenges and opportunities related to the interface between research and policy
  • Different models for knowledge transfer
  • Knowledge translation tools
Chapter 8: Population Health Monitoring and Other Health Assessments [Rainer Fehr (EUPHA section on Health Impact Assessment) & Nicole Rosenkoetter]
  • Overlap and differences between population health monitoring and other health assessments (e.g. health impact assessment, health systems assessment, health technology assessment)
  • Opportunities for integration and cross-fertilization
Chapter 9: Opportunities and Challenges [Marieke Verschuuren & Hans van Oers]
  • Integrative summary focusing on main challenges identified in the book
  • Creating opportunities by linking these challenges to new developments and innovative approaches
  • Identifying points for action (health information development agenda)

Marieke Verschuuren, MD, PhD, worked as a practicing physician, particularly in health care for the institutionalized elderly, before she started working as a researcher in 2002. Since earning her PhD in Health Technology Assessment in 2006, Dr. Verschuuren has been working in health information and public health monitoring and reporting, both at the national and at the international level. The interface of policy and research (evidence-informed policy-making) is her special interest. She has collaborated in and led various projects, among which are the European Public Health and Information System (EUPHIX) project and European Core Health Indicators and Monitoring (ECHIM) project, both co-funded by the European Commission, and the nationaalkompas.nl and volksgezondheidenzorg.info projects, both web-based public health information systems commissioned by the Dutch Ministry of Health. Furthermore, Dr. Verschuuren has extensively collaborated with WHO Regional Office for Europe. 

Dr. Verschuuren has served as editor-in-chief of the European health report 2015 and coordinator of the European Health Information Initiative (EHII), a multi-stakeholder WHO network aimed at improving the evidence base for policy making in Europe. Currently, she is a member of the EHII Steering Group and preparing health information system assessments missions to Bulgaria and Moldova as a WHO consultant. Furthermore, she is senior advisor to the Dutch Public Health Status and Forecast 2018 that aims to inform Dutch national health policy. Dr. Verschuuren also is the founder of the EUPHA section on Public Health Monitoring and Reporting.

J.A.M. (Hans) van Oers, PhD, has been working at the National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) since 1998. Since 2012, Prof. Dr. van Oers has served as RIVM’s Chief Science Officer of System Assessment and Policy Support, and since 2004, he has been a professor in Publi

Provides comprehensive information about population health monitoring, starting with the data and ending with knowledge translation

Shows the state of the art of population health monitoring in Europe

Goes beyond the theoretical framework by providing many good practice examples and hands-on tools