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Dive into the research topics where Fanny Goude is active.

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Featured researches published by Fanny Goude.


European Journal of Neurology | 2015

Comparing ischaemic stroke in six European countries. The EuroHOPE register study.

Antti Malmivaara; Atte Meretoja; Mikko Peltola; Dino Numerato; Richard Heijink; Peter Engelfriet; Sarah H. Wild; Éva Belicza; Dániel Bereczki; Emma Medin; Fanny Goude; Giorgio B. Boncoraglio; Turgut Tatlisumak; Timo T. Seppälä; Unto Häkkinen

The incidence of hospitalizations, treatment and case fatality of ischaemic stroke were assessed utilizing a comprehensive multinational database to attempt to compare the healthcare systems in six European countries, aiming also to identify the limitations and make suggestions for future improvements in the between‐country comparisons.


Health Economics | 2015

European Regional Differences in All‐Cause Mortality and Length of Stay for Patients with Hip Fracture

Emma Medin; Fanny Goude; Hans Olav Melberg; Fabrizio Tediosi; Éva Belicza; Mikko Peltola

The objective of this study was to compare healthcare performance for the surgical treatment of hip fractures across and within Finland, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Scotland, and Sweden. Differences in age-adjusted and sex-adjusted 30-day and one-year all-cause mortality rates following hip fracture, as well as the length of stay of the first hospital episode in acute care and during a follow up of 365 days, were investigated, and associations between selected country-level and regional-level factors with mortality and length of stay were assessed. Hungary showed the highest one-year mortality rate (mean 39.7%) and the lowest length of stay in one year (12.7 days), whereas Italy had the lowest one-year mortality rate (mean 19.1 %) and the highest length of stay (23.3 days). The observed variations were largely explained by country-specific effects rather than by regional-level factors. The results show that there should still be room for efficiency gains in the acute treatment of hip fracture, and clinicians, healthcare managers, and politicians should learn from best practices. This study demonstrates that an international comparison of acute hospital care is possible using pooled individual-level administrative data.


WOS | 2015

European Regional Differences in All-Cause Mortality and Length of Stay for Patients with Hip Fracture

Emma Medin; Fanny Goude; Hans Olav Melberg; Fabrizio Tediosi; Éva Belicza; Mikko J. Peltola

The objective of this study was to compare healthcare performance for the surgical treatment of hip fractures across and within Finland, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Scotland, and Sweden. Differences in age-adjusted and sex-adjusted 30-day and one-year all-cause mortality rates following hip fracture, as well as the length of stay of the first hospital episode in acute care and during a follow up of 365 days, were investigated, and associations between selected country-level and regional-level factors with mortality and length of stay were assessed. Hungary showed the highest one-year mortality rate (mean 39.7%) and the lowest length of stay in one year (12.7 days), whereas Italy had the lowest one-year mortality rate (mean 19.1 %) and the highest length of stay (23.3 days). The observed variations were largely explained by country-specific effects rather than by regional-level factors. The results show that there should still be room for efficiency gains in the acute treatment of hip fracture, and clinicians, healthcare managers, and politicians should learn from best practices. This study demonstrates that an international comparison of acute hospital care is possible using pooled individual-level administrative data.


WOS | 2016

Costs and Quality at the Hospital Level in the Nordic Countries

Sverre A.C. Kittelsen; Kjartan Sarheim Anthun; Fanny Goude; Ingrid Marie Schaumburg Huitfeldt; Unto Häkkinen; Marie Kruse; Emma Medin; Clas Rehnberg; Hanna Rättö

This article develops and analyzes patient register-based measures of quality for the major Nordic countries. Previous studies show that Finnish hospitals have significantly higher average productivity than hospitals in Sweden, Denmark, and Norway and also a substantial variation within each country. This paper examines whether quality differences can form part of the explanation and attempts to uncover quality-cost trade-offs. Data on costs and discharges in each diagnosis-related group for 160 acute hospitals in 2008-2009 were collected. Patient register-based measures of quality such as readmissions, mortality (in hospital or outside), and patient safety indices were developed and case-mix adjusted. Productivity is estimated using bootstrapped data envelopment analysis. Results indicate that case-mix adjustment is important, and there are significant differences in the case-mix adjusted performance measures as well as in productivity both at the national and hospital levels. For most quality indicators, the performance measures reveal room for improvement. There is a weak but statistical significant trade-off between productivity and inpatient readmissions within 30 days but a tendency that hospitals with high 30-day mortality also have higher costs. Hence, no clear cost-quality trade-off pattern was discovered. Patient registers can be used and developed to improve future quality and cost comparisons.


Health Economics | 2015

Costs and Quality at the Hospital Level in the Nordic Countries.

Sverre A.C. Kittelsen; Kjartan Sarheim Anthun; Fanny Goude; Ingrid Marie Schaumburg Huitfeldt; Unto Häkkinen; Marie Kruse; Emma Medin; Clas Rehnberg; Hanna Rättö

This article develops and analyzes patient register-based measures of quality for the major Nordic countries. Previous studies show that Finnish hospitals have significantly higher average productivity than hospitals in Sweden, Denmark, and Norway and also a substantial variation within each country. This paper examines whether quality differences can form part of the explanation and attempts to uncover quality-cost trade-offs. Data on costs and discharges in each diagnosis-related group for 160 acute hospitals in 2008-2009 were collected. Patient register-based measures of quality such as readmissions, mortality (in hospital or outside), and patient safety indices were developed and case-mix adjusted. Productivity is estimated using bootstrapped data envelopment analysis. Results indicate that case-mix adjustment is important, and there are significant differences in the case-mix adjusted performance measures as well as in productivity both at the national and hospital levels. For most quality indicators, the performance measures reveal room for improvement. There is a weak but statistical significant trade-off between productivity and inpatient readmissions within 30 days but a tendency that hospitals with high 30-day mortality also have higher costs. Hence, no clear cost-quality trade-off pattern was discovered. Patient registers can be used and developed to improve future quality and cost comparisons.


Health Economics | 2015

Acute Myocardial Infarction, Use of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention, and Mortality: A Comparative Effectiveness Analysis Covering Seven European Countries

Terje P. Hagen; Unto Häkkinen; Éva Belicza; Giovanni Fatore; Fanny Goude

Percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) on acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients have increased substantially in the last 12-15 years because of its clinical effectiveness. The expansion of PCI treatment for AMI patients raises two questions: How did PCI utilization rates vary across European regions, and which healthcare system and regional characteristic variables correlated with the utilization rate? Were the differences in use of PCI associated with differences in outcome, operationalized as 30-day mortality? We obtained our results from a dataset based on the administrative information systems of the populations of seven European countries. PCI rates were highest in the Netherlands, followed by Sweden and Hungary. The probability of receiving PCI was highest in regions with their own PCI facilities and in healthcare systems with activity-based reimbursement systems. Thirty-day mortality rates differed considerably between the countries with the highest rates in Hungary, Scotland, and Finland. Mortality was lowest in Sweden and Norway. The associations between PCI and mortality were remarkable in all age groups and across most countries. Despite extensive risk adjustment, we interpret the associations both as effects of selection and treatments. We observed a lower effect of PCI in the higher age groups in Hungary.


Health Economics | 2015

Individual and Regional-level Factors Contributing to Variation in Length of Stay After Cerebral Infarction in Six European Countries.

Mikko Peltola; Timo T. Seppälä; Antti Malmivaara; Éva Belicza; Dino Numerato; Fanny Goude; Eilidh Fletcher; Richard Heijink

Using patient-level data for cerebral infarction cases in 2007, gathered from Finland, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Scotland and Sweden, we studied the variation in risk-adjusted length of stay (LoS) of acute hospital care and 1-year mortality, both within and between countries. In addition, we analysed the variance of LoS and associations of selected regional-level factors with LoS and 1-year mortality after cerebral infarction. The data show that LoS distributions are surprisingly different across countries and that there is significant deviation in the risk-adjusted regional-level LoS in all of the countries studied. We used negative binomial regression to model the individual-level LoS, and random intercept models and ordinary least squares regression for the regional-level analysis of risk-adjusted LoS, variance of LoS, 1-year risk-adjusted mortality and crude mortality for a period of 31-365 days. The observed variations between regions and countries in both LoS and mortality were not fully explained by either patient-level or regional-level factors. The results indicate that there may exist potential for efficiency gains in acute hospital care of cerebral infarction and that healthcare managers could learn from best practices.


WOS | 2016

Individual and Regional-level Factors Contributing to Variation in Length of Stay After Cerebral Infarction in Six European Countries

Mikko Peltola; Timo T. Seppälä; Antti Malmivaara; Éva Belicza; Dino Numerato; Fanny Goude; Eilidh Fletcher; Richard Heijink

Using patient-level data for cerebral infarction cases in 2007, gathered from Finland, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Scotland and Sweden, we studied the variation in risk-adjusted length of stay (LoS) of acute hospital care and 1-year mortality, both within and between countries. In addition, we analysed the variance of LoS and associations of selected regional-level factors with LoS and 1-year mortality after cerebral infarction. The data show that LoS distributions are surprisingly different across countries and that there is significant deviation in the risk-adjusted regional-level LoS in all of the countries studied. We used negative binomial regression to model the individual-level LoS, and random intercept models and ordinary least squares regression for the regional-level analysis of risk-adjusted LoS, variance of LoS, 1-year risk-adjusted mortality and crude mortality for a period of 31-365 days. The observed variations between regions and countries in both LoS and mortality were not fully explained by either patient-level or regional-level factors. The results indicate that there may exist potential for efficiency gains in acute hospital care of cerebral infarction and that healthcare managers could learn from best practices.


Journal of Productivity Analysis | 2015

Decomposing the productivity differences between hospitals in the Nordic countries

Sverre A.C. Kittelsen; Benny Adam Winsnes; Kjartan Sarheim Anthun; Fanny Goude; Øyvind Hope; Unto Häkkinen; Birgitte Kalseth; Jannie Kilsmark; Emma Medin; Clas Rehnberg; Hanna Rättö


Archive | 2018

Performance comparison of patient pathways in Nordic capital areas : A pilot study

Unto Häkkinen; Christopher Engel-Andreasen; Fanny Goude; Terje P. Hagen; Marie Kruse; Tron Anders Moger; Mikko Peltola; Clas Rehnberg

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Mikko Peltola

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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Unto Häkkinen

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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Timo T. Seppälä

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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Antti Malmivaara

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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