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Ukioqatigiit

Læknablaðið - 15.09.1982, Qupperneq 36

Læknablaðið - 15.09.1982, Qupperneq 36
218 LÆKNABLAÐIÐ 6.5 Certificate of need system. Whenever a medical technology is required by an institu- tion, justification may have to be given and a special authority which after examination of the request, approves or rejects it. This authority may be seated at national level in small countries and combined with the natio- nal medical technology centre but should whenever possible be regionalized and then combined with a regional instrument and equipment centre or committee. The matter could even be further decentralized but the local authority has to rely on regional or national centres, as it would not be rational to build-up expertise and data at the peripheral level. 6.6 Technical recommendations at national or regional levels. Some countries have deve- loped a system of technical assessment of a more or less limited range of medical equip- ment through specialized institutes. The re- sults are then collated and diffused to the interested institutions on a regular basis. This procedure is particularly useful in countries having organized a national health service. 6.7 Guidance of industry. Apart from design- ing, promoting and servicing medical equip- ment, industry should be guided to develop new equipment and devices according to the real needs of the health professions. When this guidance is lacking, new industrial develop- ments may follow wrong lines and thus after an expensive evolution, the product may not be accepted by testers and consumers. In other instances a single successful technology may have to support financially other unsuc- cessful ones and then be very expensive. 6.8 Manpower training policy. The trend to- ward medical specialization is linked directly with the availability and use of specific medi- cal technologies. It follows that policies that influence the number and speciality distribu- tion of physicians can be expected to have a direct impact on the use of medical technolo- gies. This is particularly true of the high capital (i.e., CT scanners) and high labour (i.e., gastrointestinal endoscopy) technologies that tend to be restricted to specialists, and less true of the low capital, high volume technolo- gies that apply to all categories of physicians. While the specialist-to-generalists balance is a factor regulating high cost technology use, the overall supply of physicians is an important determinant of the use of low cost technolo- gies. The need for a greater proportion of primary health care physicians not only for overall health reasons but also for an appro- priate use of the necessary technologies is to be emphasized. 6.9 Physician education. The current training of new physicians in most universities of the Region heavily emphasizes the use of the latest procedures and equipment. Even per- sons being trained as primary care physicians attend the same medical schools as the future specialists, institutions where »the practice of medicine« is epitomized by the best-equipped, around-the-clock diagnostic and treatment facilities. This leaves the new graduate in a difficult situation when he is left on his own in a remote area. The teaching of the choice and utilization of medical technologies according to the real needs of patients and community should be an essential part of all curricula not only for undergraduate, post-graduate and refresher training of physicians, but should also be incorporated in the programmes destined to other health care personnel. General practitio- ners should be well-informed about the values and limitations of all available technologies. This is considered as one of the most effective measures in cost-containment. 6.10 Consumer education. Under this appro- ach, consumers would be educated about the costs of the health care they receive. As they do not always receive a hospital bill, they often have no idea what services and supplies were furnished. If patients received adequate information and copies of their bills, they would become more aware of the cost of the services they demand and would perhaps question their necessity. The media could also be better used to publicize the need for second opinions, the existence of unnecessary operations and tests and the limitations of certain procedures. If patients were enlightened about some of the uncertainties, the costs, and the risks, some behavioural changes may take place. 6.11 Coordinated Research policy. This may be an important contributing factor in cost-

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