RESUMEN
The present work pretend to describe the development achieved in the field of health technology assessment and to propose a set of criteria to evaluate them, with the intention that it will lead to the development of health programs and policy with a tendency to maximize effectiveness, efficiency and quality, within a frame of increasing needs and scarce technical and economic resources for health care. For this work, a comprehensive review was carried out about the background of health technology adoption in our country, and the context by which to evaluate the accessibility and utilization of the health technology. In the section for technology assessment, it is propose a method to evaluate based upon the natural history of disease, that is, the traditional form of health assessment is restricted to a cross section in time (vertical evaluation), and in this study the authors propose a model with a horizontal approach, that should offer as its main virtues the development of guidelines with regards to prevention, diagnosis and treatment, in addition to cost containment, in support to a more effective and higher quality medical practice.
Asunto(s)
Estado de Salud , Ciencia del Laboratorio Clínico , Países en Desarrollo/economía , Métodos Epidemiológicos , Estudios de Evaluación como Asunto , Predicción , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud , Humanos , Servicios de Información , Ciencia del Laboratorio Clínico/economía , México , Modelos Teóricos , Investigación , Transferencia de TecnologíaRESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the quality of the medical certification of deaths of 10-49 year-old women, resident in the Southern region of the city of S. Paulo METHODS: The Puffer methodology was utilized to investigate the causes of death of all 10-49 year-old women, resident in the region, and deceased in the year 1989 (664 deaths in the total). The main causes of death in the original death certificates and the "new" causes of death arisen from the research were compared. The sensitivity and the kappa index were calculated. RESULTS: In some chapters of the International Classification of Diseases and Causes of Death, 9th Revision (CID-9), a high sensitivity was found: "Diseases of the Circulatory System" (91.9%), "Neoplasms" (89.7%) and "External Causes" (84.1 %). In some others, a very low sensitivity was found. The chapter "Mental Illnesses", with a 34.3 percent sensitivity only, must be mentioned. From 11 deaths originally classified in this chapter, 32 cases were found. In most of these "new" cases, the main cause of death was found to be alcoholism. The chapter "Complications of Pregnancy, Delivery and the Puerperium", also showed a low sensitivity (44.9%). The kappa index was found to be 0.63, which indicated a regular concordance. DISCUSSION: The quality of the medical certification of causes of death is still unsatisfactory in the studied area. This poor quality may affect negatively the interventions in the area of women's health, masking the severity of important problems