Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4199049 | Health Policy | 2007 | 14 Pages |
It is important that debate occurs between theorists, policy makers, clinicians and service end-users to develop agreement over suitable and appropriate indicators for primary health care. A formal accounting of the relative strengths and weaknesses of any proposed indicator will enable sector commentators from a variety of viewpoints to discuss the relative merits of individual indicators, to understand the political and pragmatic reasons for their inclusion in any set of indicators and to trace the likely organisational impact of any given indicator.This paper details the development of an indicator appraisal tool that combines the assessment of scientific evidence with contextual considerations from the perspective of both the policy environment and the primary health care sector. The use of the tool is discussed in the context of the proposed national implementation of a set of performance indicators in New Zealand.