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Hospitals under the 'spotlight' with new performance dashboard showcasing best and worst in class

Hospitals under the 'spotlight' with new performance dashboard showcasing best and worst in class

The Journal3 days ago

A NEW ONLINE dashboard which puts the 'spotlight' on the productivity performance of hospitals around the country
has gone live this afternoon
.
Launched by the Department of Health, the new dashboard collates pre-existing statistics into fresh formats that provide perspectives on what has been dubbed a 'productivity conundrum' by senior officials.
The new platform, which will be open to the public to access, comes just days after Health Minister Jennifer Carroll MacNeill announced that the majority of health staff will have to work weekends under a new rostering deal.
The online tool allows for the comparisons of waiting lists and other performance indicators, such as weekend discharges, but it will also allow hospital management to benchmark their performance against their peers.
The department said the dashboard is a 'learning tool' and 'not a stick to beat anyone with'.
Quietly it is the expected it will increase accountability for hospital management teams whose productivity metrics are going in the wrong direction.
Increase in consultants but fall-off in appointments
One of the key data set looks at the rise in the number of full-time consultants working in the health system. Despite the increase, the data shows a fall-off in consultant appointments.
Consultants could have held 1.5 million more appointments last year if they were operating on the same level of productivity as 10 years ago, according to the new metrics calculated by the Department of Health.
This is something department officials have said there needs to be an 'important debate' around, stating that hospital management need to 'get to grips with that question'.
Department officials said the dynamics behind that discrepancy have yet to be explained, adding that Ireland would have a 'vastly more effective service' and 'massive reductions in waiting times' if 2016 productivity levels had been maintained.
Acknowledging that consultants may find the blunt comparison unfair given the impact of Covid-19 on the intervening years, officials still said the health service seems to be 'a bit stuck' on the roughly 1,200-appointments-per-consultant figure.
Described as a 'productivity puzzle', officials outlined the fall in outpatient appointments per consultant.
There were 1,812 consultants in 2016, rising to 3,061 in 2024.
However, the number of appointments per consultant has fallen from 1,686 in 2016 to 1,209 in 2020 – where it appears to have roughly plateaued into the present day.
Using the correlating 3.1 million outpatient appointments in 2016, the department said this meant the same efficiency could have resulted in 5.2 million outpatient appointments last year.
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However, this is 1.5 million above the actual figure of appointments which stood at just 3.7 million in 2024.
'We're open to hearing from consultants who are the experts in it,' a department official said, adding that it 'definitely warrants a major effort' to push back towards previous productivity levels – even if 2016 rates are no longer realistic.
What hospital is doing the best at weekend discharges?
The dashboard also looks at weekend discharges, something the health minister has been focusing on since taking office. The data shows that only three hospitals are meeting the target of 17%.
It shows that Portlaoise Hospital, Portiuncula University Hospital and Cork University Hospital have reached the target, but the majority fall far short.
Officials believe that moves to a fuller seven-day working week will improve productivity.
Will money follow productivity?
The new dashboard attempts to distil years-long increases in productivity across different types of care into a single figure so as to compare where there has been expenditure increases, and to review if productivity has followed.
Officials said it showed that some hospitals are 'notably better' at converting increased funding into activity, adding that they wish to determine the reasons for that.
The department said that when major public investment decisions are being made in healthcare, there is a need to have assurances that investment will be converted into improved services.
This platform will now add transparency around that very question.
The health minister said today that there has not been enough focus on how hospitals are locally managing increased investment and whether it is being done in the most efficient way for better patient outcomes.
Carroll McNeill said: 'For too long hospitals have had the opportunity to regard themselves as independent republics.
'They are very much part of a State system that is funded by the State, and it's a reasonable and appropriate process to shine this light in relation to their activity.'
She said it could not be the case that increased investment in health did not result in increased efficiency.
Carroll McNeill added: 'That means more outpatient appointments, that means better use of surgical capacity, that means better use of diagnostic capacity.
'And I think the productivity dashboard here is a way of making sure that we are holding hospitals and individual specialisms to account to manage themselves better.'
With reporting by Press Association
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