My interest in value-based health care was sparked when I undertook a study tour to the US in 2019. As part of my work at the Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (IHPA), I was investigating new funding models that would potentially see the Australian hospital system move towards a more flexible funding system allowing for more patient centric pathways of care.
The trip didn’t provide any shining success stories, in fact if anything, it showed that Australia was probably leading the way in many approaches to value-based health care. However, the trip gave me a much better understanding of how the Australian health system works compared to the US system and the barriers that would need to be overcome to enable a value-based system to work in the Australian healthcare setting.
With this in mind, I continued to work on funding model policy and started to develop a number of contacts in the field. When I saw an advert to undertake a six-month secondment leading the AHHA’s Australian Centre for Value-Based Healthcare it seemed like my planets had aligned. I was very lucky in that my CEO supported the secondment as he saw how it would contribute to the work I was undertaking at IHACPA.
It had been the intention that I would work remotely for the Centre which I was looking forward to as new challenge. Little did I know that a couple of months after starting we’d all be working remotely due to the COVID-19 lockdown. As all the AHHA team were working remotely we were all in the same boat and it enabled me to get to know the team much better than I probably would have otherwise. I got to meet and work with an amazing bunch of people that are passionate about healthcare in Australia and will certainly maintain the friendships that I made during what will always be a very memorable time of all our lives – especially those of us that were homeschooling.
The secondment allowed me to really push my writing skills and gave me the opportunity to set my own agenda – a rare luxury! AHHA provided an incredibly supportive environment giving me the freedom to explore my own thoughts and put them down on paper or talk to them in webinars.
Probably the most rewarding achievement during the secondment was working with the Value Institute for Health and Care at the University of Texas to develop an education program for Australian healthcare leaders. The opportunity to work with Alice Andrews, Elizabeth Teisberg and Scott Wallace, world renowned proponents of value-based healthcare thinking, was a rare opportunity and one I will never forget. I am lucky enough to be participating in the education program and am relishing the opportunity to meet likeminded people.
I thoroughly enjoyed my six-months leading the Centre and I hope to remain connected to the many inspiring health professionals I met during my time there. I am ever grateful to the leaders at IHACPA and AHHA that allowed me this opportunity. I remain passionate about the goals of putting the patient at the centre of care and will continue to work on advocating for ways to achieve this.