{"title":"Stakeholder","authors":"Kristijan Krkač","doi":"10.4135/9781412952583.n469","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The emergence of skeletal prosthetic attachments leaves governmental organizations facing the challenge of implementing equitable policies that support the provision of bone-anchored prostheses (BAPs). In 2013, the Queensland Artificial Limb Service (QALS) started a five-year research project focusing on health service delivery and economic evaluation of BAPs. This paper reflects on the QALS experience, particularly the lessons learned. QALS’ jurisdiction and drivers are presented first, followed by the impact of outcomes, barriers, and facilitators, as well as future developments of this work. The 21 publications produced during this project (e.g., reimbursement policy, role of prosthetists, continuous improvement procedure, quality of life, preliminary cost-utilities) were summarized. Literature on past, current, and upcoming developments of BAP was reviewed to discuss the practical implications of this work. A primary outcome of this project was a policy developed by QALS supporting up to 22 h of labor for the provision of BAP care. The indicative incremental cost-utility ratio for transfemoral and transtibial BAPs was approximately AUD$17,000 and AUD$12,000, respectively, per quality-adjusted life-year compared to socket prostheses. This project was challenged by 17 barriers (e.g., limited resources, inconsistency of care pathways, design of preliminary cost-utility analyses) but eased by 18 facilitators (e.g., action research plan, customized database, use of free repositories). In conclusion, we concluded that lower limb BAP might be an acceptable alternative to socket prostheses from an Australian government prosthetic care perspective. Hopefully, this work will inform promoters of prosthetic innovations committed to making bionic solutions widely accessible to a growing population of individuals suffering from limb loss worldwide.","PeriodicalId":335237,"journal":{"name":"Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals","volume":"19 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-11-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"23","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.4135/9781412952583.n469","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 23

Abstract

The emergence of skeletal prosthetic attachments leaves governmental organizations facing the challenge of implementing equitable policies that support the provision of bone-anchored prostheses (BAPs). In 2013, the Queensland Artificial Limb Service (QALS) started a five-year research project focusing on health service delivery and economic evaluation of BAPs. This paper reflects on the QALS experience, particularly the lessons learned. QALS’ jurisdiction and drivers are presented first, followed by the impact of outcomes, barriers, and facilitators, as well as future developments of this work. The 21 publications produced during this project (e.g., reimbursement policy, role of prosthetists, continuous improvement procedure, quality of life, preliminary cost-utilities) were summarized. Literature on past, current, and upcoming developments of BAP was reviewed to discuss the practical implications of this work. A primary outcome of this project was a policy developed by QALS supporting up to 22 h of labor for the provision of BAP care. The indicative incremental cost-utility ratio for transfemoral and transtibial BAPs was approximately AUD$17,000 and AUD$12,000, respectively, per quality-adjusted life-year compared to socket prostheses. This project was challenged by 17 barriers (e.g., limited resources, inconsistency of care pathways, design of preliminary cost-utility analyses) but eased by 18 facilitators (e.g., action research plan, customized database, use of free repositories). In conclusion, we concluded that lower limb BAP might be an acceptable alternative to socket prostheses from an Australian government prosthetic care perspective. Hopefully, this work will inform promoters of prosthetic innovations committed to making bionic solutions widely accessible to a growing population of individuals suffering from limb loss worldwide.
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骨骼假体附着物的出现使政府组织面临着实施公平政策以支持提供骨锚定假体(BAPs)的挑战。2013年,昆士兰州假肢服务中心(QALS)启动了一项为期五年的研究项目,重点关注bap的卫生服务提供和经济评估。本文反思了QALS的经验,特别是从中吸取的教训。首先介绍了QALS的管辖权和驱动因素,然后介绍了结果、障碍和促进因素的影响,以及这项工作的未来发展。总结了本项目期间出版的21份出版物(例如:偿还政策、义肢医师的作用、持续改进程序、生活质量、初步费用-效用)。回顾了过去、现在和未来BAP发展的文献,讨论了这项工作的实际意义。该项目的主要成果是QALS制定了一项政策,支持长达22小时的劳动力提供BAP护理。与套孔假体相比,经股骨和经胫骨BAPs的指示性增量成本-效用比分别为每个质量调整生命年约17,000澳元和12,000澳元。该项目面临17个障碍(例如,资源有限、护理途径不一致、初步成本效用分析的设计)的挑战,但18个促进因素(例如,行动研究计划、定制数据库、使用免费存储库)使该项目得以缓解。综上所述,我们得出结论,从澳大利亚政府假肢护理的角度来看,下肢BAP可能是一种可接受的替代假体。希望这项工作能够为假肢创新的推动者提供信息,使仿生解决方案广泛适用于全球越来越多的肢体丧失患者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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