Academic literature on the topic 'Économie hospitalière'
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Journal articles on the topic "Économie hospitalière"
Geeraert, Jérémy. "La prise en charge par l’hôpital des populations à la marge du système de santé en France : l’exemple des Permanences d’accès aux soins de santé." Saúde e Sociedade 27, no. 3 (September 2018): 654–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0104-12902018180550.
Full textFoggin, Peter, Lucie Desmarais, Marie-France Joly, Guylaine Poirier, and Odile Tremblay. "Analyse cartographique de la morbidité hospitalière dans la région de Montréal." Cahiers de géographie du Québec 27, no. 71 (April 12, 2005): 185–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/021608ar.
Full textDupanloup-Meistelman, Danièle. "Économies hospitalières : impulsons la “positive attitude”." Oxymag 29, no. 151 (November 2016): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.oxy.2016.10.007.
Full textSalaouatchi, Sofiane, and Nesrine Boucha. "ospital governance and new public management in a university hospital center in Algeria." Lebanese Science Journal 19, no. 3 (December 27, 2018): 465–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.22453/lsj-019.3.465485.
Full textLemay, Anne, François Béland, André-Pierre Contandriopoulos, Marcel Boucher, and Ginette Lavoie. "Analyse économique de l'utilisation des services d'urgence hospitaliers." Sciences sociales et santé 14, no. 2 (1996): 5–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/sosan.1996.1356.
Full textHurl, Chris. "A Militancy of Invidious Comparisons." Labour / Le Travail 89 (May 27, 2022): 235–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.52975/llt.2022v89.009.
Full textCollin, Arnaud, Quentin Demanet, Bertrand Fenoll, Jérôme Joubert, and Erwann Paul. "L’analyse économique des coopérations inter-hospitalières : la coopération pour la concurrence." Journal de gestion et d'économie médicales 33, no. 2 (2015): 137. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/jgem.152.0137.
Full textMechri, Anwar, Férid Zaafrane, Geneviève Khiari, Leila Gassab, Naceur Mohamed Moussi, and Lotfi Gaha. "Troubles de l’adaptation : étude clinique d’une population hospitalière tunisienne." Santé mentale au Québec 28, no. 1 (November 5, 2003): 278–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/006992ar.
Full textJellad, A., M. A. Bouaziz, S. Salah, and Z. Ben Salah. "Impact économique des troubles musculo-squelettiques chez le personnel hospitalier." Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine 54 (October 2011): e25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rehab.2011.07.881.
Full textLANGE, M., R. STROIAZZA, I. LICAJ, A. RABIAZA, F. LE BAS, and X. HUMBERT. "PANDEMIE COVID-19 : QUEL RETENTISSEMENT PSYCHOLOGIQUE CHEZ LES PROFESSIONNELS DE SANTE DE SOINS PREMIERS ?" EXERCER 33, no. 184 (June 1, 2022): 260–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.56746/exercer.2022.184.260.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Économie hospitalière"
Domin, Jean-Paul. "Les dépenses hospitalières entre 1803 et 1993 : dynamique hospitalière et cycles longs." Paris 1, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA010056.
Full textThe hospital system is tightly linked to the economic system. To relate both entities over this long period of time allows a setter apprehension of the current characteristics and stakes I and of the difficulties met by the system of taking charge of the diseased the hospital system was developed through a succession of stages. Each period has its own economic organisation, a disposition of social protection and health system. Those three points are deeply imbricated, achieving a resulation process. From 1603 to 1690, while france was getting industrialised, the social system was built around individual contingency fund. The medical care system is divided into a commercial sphere (doctors, healthofficers) and a non-commercial sphere (the hospital), offering assistances the destitute only. From 1895 to 1945, the capitalist system concentrated and labour rarefied. A collective disposition for social protection started to develop and the hospital system slowly opened t0 the whole population from 1945 on, the economic growth and the social security accelerated the rise of the hospital today's crisis questions this growth. The analysis calls for the hospitals quantitative history (volume I) and is founded on the l0ng-term construction of m0netary and non-monetary series. These series show evidence of long term cyclic fluctuations contrary to kondratieff's movements. During the crisis periods, called phase B, hospital expenses raise. This particularity underlines the contercyclique regulator charactere of the hospital. Since 1945, this tendency has been absent, therefore, the hospital system had to participate to the economic growth but, the crisis urges transformations and favours the emergence of new experiments regardind hospital organisation
Quantin, Catherine. "Contribution à l'évaluation de l'activité hospitalière : une modélisation par sous-groupes homogènes pour une gestion médicalisée à l'hôpital." Dijon, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997DIJOE016.
Full textSince the early 1980s healthcare systems in the industrialized nations have been undergoing radical reform aimed at curbing overspending of hospital expenditure. After a discussion of the limits of a prospective payment due to heterogeneity of costs within DRGS, we demonstrate the ability of a novel statistical model to identify high cost patients. We derive from this statistical model an economic heuristic in order to account for high cost patients in budget allocation and a structural and contingent method is proposed as a budgeting tool. Economic analysis based on this modelling of DRG heterogeneity further reveals the potential for improving the equity and the efficiency of the prospective payment system by restricting its perverse effects. This model may also be used as a strategic management tool for hospitals or as a means for regulators to evaluate treatment and admission practices so as to improve health care provision. This statistical analysis was designed on the basis of a mixture of weibull distribution, in which proportion of high-cost patients was expressed according to the multinomial logistic regression, allowing the determination of high-cost factors. An application of the statistical model to 124 DRGS on a French reference database stresses the problem of heterogeneity of costs and length of stays within most of DRGS. An example of identification of explanatory variables of high costs is carried out on several DRGS. The economic application of the statistical model is discussed pointing out the implications, in terms of efficiency, of improving hospital management. The other advantage of this statistical model is to allow the assessment of a revision of the DRG classification from both statistical and economic point of views
Mathy, Caryn. "L' hôpital entre le plan et le marché : une analyse de la régulation hospitalière à l'aune de la distinction "allocation de ressources", "création de ressources"." Dijon, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998DIJOE009.
Full textFor the past 30 years, spending control in hospitals has been the central point of health policies, without achieving satisfactory results. Analysis of hospital policies which were conducted until 1991 shows that hospital sector, initially managed by the central administration, integrates some kind of market relationship after reforms were introduced. This evolution raise some questions about the coherence of the objectives being pursued. Hospital regulation during this period comes under both a planned logic and a market logic. Analysis of related economics theories shows that they followed a similar proceeding. Starting from a strictly neoclassical regulation analysis amended by taking into account the health specificity which leads to the state intervention justification rather than free market, the economical analysis reintroduce both the question of market selection through the theory of contestable markets and then the question of incentive contracts. These contracts include overall actors interactions within the hospital. The organization then becomes a kind of ressources coordination and allocation which is an alternative to the free market system. However, these two theorical analysis reach limits. These limits are circumvented by the conventionnalist theory which introduces confidential relations and ethical concept and the evolutionary theory which considers organization evolution by questionning the emergence of organizational procedures. Hospital then become, on one hand, a burthplace for common rules which coordinate individuals according to non-market logic and, on the other hand, a health care producer which motivates and creates knowledge and know how, according to ressource creation logic. With this double viewpoint, analysis of the 1996 public and private hospital reform becomes of some interest hospital sector regulation takes into account some events with a ressources creation logic such as the increased usage of the drgs and such as hospital accreditation. As a result, a reorganization of health care services based upon a comprehensive qualification criteria rather than a stricthly financial criteria can be expected
Pariente, Jean-Marc. "Actualité économique hospitalière : analyse économique du fonctionnement des services hospitaliers." Montpellier 1, 1989. http://www.theses.fr/1989MON11100.
Full textMichel, Morgane. "Influence de la précarité sur l'efficience de la prise en charge hospitalière en pédiatrie." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université Paris Cité, 2021. http://www.theses.fr/2021UNIP5231.
Full textBackground: Many studies in adult patients have found that deprivation is associated with a significant increase in length of stay (LOS) and costs for hospital admissions. In health care systems where hospital tariffs are based on mean national LOS, deprived patients may prevent hospitals from reaching this efficiency standard, in particular in the case of paediatric patients as clinicians could be reluctant to discharge them if there are issues with their living environment. This may in turn negatively impact hospitals’ financial balance. Objectives: To study the association of deprivation and hospital efficiency, and of deprivation and hospitals’ financial balance in hospitals with a paediatric in-patient population. Method: An observational study using hospital discharge databases was carried out for the years 2012-2014. All neonatal (before 28 days of age) and paediatric admissions in maternity hospitals and/or hospitals with at least one paediatric department located in mainland France were included and analysed separately. Deprivation was assessed through an ecological indicator at the postcode level, the FDep, divided into national quintiles. Efficiency endpoints included the ratio of a patient’s LOS with: 1/ the mean national paediatric LOS, 2/ the mean national LOS of the root of their diagnosis-related group (DRG), 3/ the mean national LOS of their DRG, and 4/ the mean LOS of their DRG in the national hospital cost study. Indicators of financial balance at the admission level included production costs, revenues, and the ratio of the two. At the hospital level, financial balance was assessed by aggregating the difference between revenues and costs for all admissions in a given hospital. Health outcomes were also included in the analysis. Endpoints were calculated for each FDep quintile, and multivariable regression models looked at the association between deprivation and the different endpoints after adjusting on patient characteristics as well as on the characteristics of the hospital and the environment. Results: 4,121,187 paediatric admissions and 2,149,454 admissions for a birth were included in the analysis. In paediatric patients, there was a significant increase in LOS compared to mean national LOS all along the social gradient. Deprivation was also associated with increased production costs, not fully compensated by increased revenues. In addition, health outcomes were worse in the most deprived patients, who were at increased risk of in-hospital mortality and readmissions within 15 days of discharge. In new-borns, the association between deprivation and LOS was not as strong, and increased production costs were compensated by increased revenues. However, health outcomes were still worse in deprived patients. At the hospital level, the case-mix of deprived patients was associated with its financial balance or with the probability that it would be in deficit. Conclusion: A reform of how deprivation is accounted for in hospitals’ payment methods should be considered, and DRG dedicated to paediatric populations should become the norm rather than the exception. Further analyses are required to determine how tariffs should be adjusted. Interventions aimed at tackling poorer health outcomes in more deprived paediatric patients should also be developed to reduce social health inequalities
Frachette, Marc. "Le pilotage médico-pharmaceutique : vers une plus grande légitimité de la pharmacie hospitalière par la coopération avec les services cliniques : cas de recherches-interventions en hôpital public." Thesis, Lyon 3, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014LYO30035/document.
Full textThe right to health is a universal right of peoples, internationally acknowledged by the World Health Organization and , in France, by the Code of Public Health. But, the evolution of demography and epidemiology explains the will to rationalize public policies and to master the costs of health systems. Hospitals, centuries old institutions, have always tried to adapt their organizations to meet the health needs of populations ; they occupy central places in health systems and their pharmacies play key roles in the good management of medicines, in partnership with clinical services.The literature of management sciences provides precious reading grids to shed light on the running of hospitals. The socio-economic theory provides a way of dealing with organization misgovernments and an integrated management approach. The theories of cooperation and legitimacy in organizations supplement the academic concepts summoned up in favour of the recognition and the efficiency of pharmacies inside hospitals.The research of fields of observation was guided by an epistemiological posture and a methodogical choice; intervention-research favoured a global approach of those fields, made the integration of other management tools easier and took part in the strengthening of the medico-pharmarceutic process via various actions taken with pharmacy service actors aimed at medicine users.This work provided help to bring to the fore “cooperation-legitimacy” couples and to make possible a better identification of zones of cooperation and legitimacy at the same time traditional, functional, relational and involving decisions as well , in hospital pharmacies with the interested parties
Rochut, Julie. "Health care supply, payment system and medical practice : evidence from obstetric practice." Paris, EHESS, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010EHES0017.
Full textA significant share of deliveries are performed by Cesarian section (C-section) in Europe and j many developed and developing countries. The aims of this thesis are to highlight the non medical, especially economic and financial, incentives that expIain the use of C-section, as well as the medical consequences of C-section on women's health, in regard with other factors of obstetrical care quality such as hospital concentration. Our analysis focus on two countries, France and Switzerland. In the first part of the thesis, we show the influence of two non medical factors on to C-section use, namely the hospital payment system and the obstetricians behaviour, especially their demand for leisure. We show payment system and the number of obstetricians have an impact on C-section use and that the rise of C-section rate between 2003 and 2006 is mainly caused by changes in hospitals and patients features. Yet, it can show that obstetricians change their coding practises to justify the use of certain practice. Using Shelton Brown III identification strategy, we found a potential impact of obstetricians leisure preference on the use of C-section, demand for leisure has a significant impact on the resort to emergency C-section. The second part of the thesis deals with obstetric care quality , using swiss and french data to study the impact of C-section on the patients' probability of having an obstetric complication and the influence of concentration between hospitals on the quality of obstetric care. We find there are risks entailed by C-section on obstetric complications. We find that hospital concentration has a negative impact on obstetric care quality
Hrifach, Abdelbaste. "Coût du prélèvement d'organes dans le système de soins français." Thesis, Lyon, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018LYSE1231/document.
Full textIn a first part, we developed a mixed method combining top-down micro-costing and bottom-up micro-costing to accurately assess the costs of organ recovery in a French hospital group. We compared this mixed method versus full top-down micro-costing to assess potential differences. In view of illustration, we applied in a second part the results of pancreas recovery cost to value the islet transplantation procedure. During a third part, we assessed organ recovery costs based on the national hospital discharge database and a national cost study from 8 consecutive years. Results of the first and the second publication, each based on specific database, appear to be widely different. We compared, in a last part, the hospital cost accounting system in a French hospital group with the national cost study in terms of the cost of organ recovery procedures. This study highlights the cost differences existing between hospital cost accounting and the national cost study. These differences relativize and lend caution to the interpretation of the results of our previous study assessing organ recovery cost from national data. Given these differences, it is fundamental for readers, hospital managers and decision-makers to know the strengths and weaknesses of each methodological approach and the strengths and weaknesses of each database used to be able to interpret the results in an informed context
Meynet, Robert. "Micro-économie de l'infection nosocomiale." Lyon 3, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987LYO33020.
Full textThis work has been realized in lyon which is the second largest hospital structure in france in two departments of abdominal surgery for one year and in prospective. 15,4 per cent of the sick have been infected and the cost of this infection amounts to 16. 994 french francs on average per patient 1978, that is an 80 per cent rate of increase (37. 138 20. 144) for infected sick patients as compared with non infected ones. The microeconomic infection cost includes not only invoiced postoperative hospital cost (stay, examinations, medical treatment) but also the post hospital cost, valued from the studied medical consumption angle during the six months after coming out of hospital (new hospital admissions, care, examinations, pharmacy, convalescence home). Another type of non invoiced post operative medical hospital cost valued from a difference in intensity of care between infected sick patients and non infected sick ones : this type of cost comes in addition to invoiced cost. The invoiced social cost worked out from wages paid completes the microeconomical infection cost notion. In relation to previously published international studies, this work presents a particularity in the approach of invoiced medical postoperative hospital cost and non invoiced medical postoperative cost
Monsia, Benessi Th. "La consommation de petits matériels à usage unique et stérile en milieu hospitalier." Lyon 3, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987LYO33014.
Full textEconomical and technical mutations set numberless problems to hospitals as regards their management and financing. For half a century, the increase in the cost of sanitation has been steadily progressing within the oecd, under a three fold pressing necessity: - the setting up of medical and medico-technical innovations, - working conditions improvement and better incomes for an ever higher skilled staff, - a growing demand for medical care and safety and quality requirements. Formerly the ultimate chance for the underprivileged, hospitals now tend to become, thanks to ever more impressive technical availabilities, the last resort to complex technics and specialised teams for the most affected patients. These changes and achievements have not held back hospital contagia, even if existing medical and pharmaceutic availabilities have greatly facilitated diagnosing formerly incurable diseases hospital and nosocomial infections are a constant worry in hospital headquaters: - medical practitioners are aware of newborn risks for frail people being admitted to a hospital, - administration managers ponder on the economic issue. This sanitation concern has led to an increasing consumption of sterelised disposable minor equipment in every hospital department. This increase is also correlative to the commercial policy of private companies, against which hospitals can hardly defend themselves. With these requirements, hospital policy now drives at a better management of this disposable minor equipment, at a more rigorous budgetary control and at the development of lighter replacement structures. Likewise, the difficulty in obtaining a decrease in the costs of personnel expenses, induces hospital managers to shift their efforts to master hospital production costs, and to a somehow uniform purchasing of disposable equipment within the framework of what the whole budget allows for. Therefore, a slackening in regulations seems to be necessary to give hospital administration more self-government in a widely changing environment
Books on the topic "Économie hospitalière"
Une histoire économique de l'hôpital, XIXe-XXe siècles: Une analyse rétrospective du développement hospitalier. Paris: Comité d'histoire de la sécurité sociale, 2008.
Find full textHealth Economics (3rd Edition). 3rd ed. Addison Wesley, 2002.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Économie hospitalière"
Thiébaut-Bertrand, Anne, and Denis Fière. "Chapitre 32. La démarche socio-économique et les structures hospitalières." In Traité du management socio-économique, 420–30. EMS Editions, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/ems.saval.2021.01.0420.
Full textThouverez, Chantal. "Chapitre 36. Le projet d’amélioration socio-économique, source de qualité et de performance dans les centres hospitaliers." In Traité du management socio-économique, 459–68. EMS Editions, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/ems.saval.2021.01.0459.
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