TY - JOUR
T1 - Priority setting and cross-country learning
T2 - the relevance of TO-REACH for primary care
AU - Groenewegen, Peter
AU - Hansen, Johan
AU - Fahy, Nick
AU - Haarmann, Alexander
AU - Montante, Sabrina
AU - Azzopardi Muscat, Natasha
AU - Poldrugovac, Mircha
AU - Ricciardi, Walter
AU - Tomaselli, Gianpaolo
N1 - Funding Information: TO-REACH was funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 733274. Publisher Copyright: ©
PY - 2022/7/22
Y1 - 2022/7/22
N2 - AIM: To inform the primary care community about priorities for research in primary care as came up from the European project TO-REACH and to discuss transferability of service and policy innovations between countries. BACKGROUND: TO-REACH stands for Transfer of Organizational innovations for Resilient, Effective, equitable, Accessible, sustainable and Comprehensive Health services and systems. This EU-funded project has put health systems and services research higher on the European agenda and has led to the current development of a European 'Partnership Transforming Health and Care Systems'. METHODS: To identify research priorities, both qualitative and quantitative approaches were used. Policy documents and strategic roadmaps were searched, and priorities were mapped. Stakeholders were involved through national roundtable consultations and online consultations. Regarding transferability, we carried out a review of the literature, guided by a conceptual framework, and using a snowballing approach. FINDINGS: Primary care emerged as an important priority from the inventory, as are areas that are conducive to strengthening primary care, such as workforce policies. The large variation in service organisation and policy around primary care in Europe is a huge potential for cross-country learning. However, the simple transfer of primary care service and policy arrangements from one health system to another has a big chance to fail, unless known conditions for successful transfer are taken into account and gaps in our knowledge about transfer are resolved.
AB - AIM: To inform the primary care community about priorities for research in primary care as came up from the European project TO-REACH and to discuss transferability of service and policy innovations between countries. BACKGROUND: TO-REACH stands for Transfer of Organizational innovations for Resilient, Effective, equitable, Accessible, sustainable and Comprehensive Health services and systems. This EU-funded project has put health systems and services research higher on the European agenda and has led to the current development of a European 'Partnership Transforming Health and Care Systems'. METHODS: To identify research priorities, both qualitative and quantitative approaches were used. Policy documents and strategic roadmaps were searched, and priorities were mapped. Stakeholders were involved through national roundtable consultations and online consultations. Regarding transferability, we carried out a review of the literature, guided by a conceptual framework, and using a snowballing approach. FINDINGS: Primary care emerged as an important priority from the inventory, as are areas that are conducive to strengthening primary care, such as workforce policies. The large variation in service organisation and policy around primary care in Europe is a huge potential for cross-country learning. However, the simple transfer of primary care service and policy arrangements from one health system to another has a big chance to fail, unless known conditions for successful transfer are taken into account and gaps in our knowledge about transfer are resolved.
KW - international comparison
KW - primary care
KW - priority setting
KW - transferability
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134792400&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S1463423622000287
DO - https://doi.org/10.1017/S1463423622000287
M3 - Article
C2 - 35866473
SN - 1463-4236
VL - 23
SP - e40
JO - Primary health care research and development
JF - Primary health care research and development
M1 - e40
ER -