Teaching hospital planning: a case study and the need for reform
Affiliation.
- 1 Department of Geriatric Medicine, Prince Charles Hospital, Brisbane, QLD, Australia. [email protected]
- PMID: 20712545
- DOI: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2010.tb03874.x
Academic teaching hospitals and their networks can best serve patients and other stakeholders by achieving critical mass and scope of clinical services, teaching and research. Successful hospital reconfigurations are associated with a convincing case and majority clinician buy-in. The inscrutable political decision to relocate services away from a major teaching hospital campus and into a merged Queensland Children's Hospital was determined without broad stakeholder consultation or a transparent and accountable business case. This compromised process poses a significant and enduring risk to patient care and Queensland's paediatric, perinatal, adolescent and obstetric academic teaching hospital services. As the proposed major stakeholder in Australia's public hospitals and medical workforce training, the federal government should review this decision using an effective methodology incorporating relevant criteria. National guidelines are needed to ensure best practice in the future planning and auditing of major health care projects. The medical profession is responsible for ensuring that health care policy complies with reliable evidence and good practice.
- Child Health Services
- Child, Preschool
- Health Care Reform / legislation & jurisprudence*
- Health Facility Merger / legislation & jurisprudence*
- Health Policy / legislation & jurisprudence*
- Health Services Accessibility / legislation & jurisprudence
- Health Services Accessibility / organization & administration*
- Hospitals, Pediatric
- Hospitals, Teaching / legislation & jurisprudence*
- Hospitals, Teaching / organization & administration*
- Infant, Newborn
- Maternal Health Services
- Organizational Case Studies
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