Smart Regulation: Can New Types of Governance Improve Health?
An Interdisciplinary Symposium
The symposium will examine how new forms of regulation and
governance affect prospects for health systems change and improvement.
New governance includes a wide variety of processes but all differ from
top-down, command and control style regulation. Recent examples of new
governance in action include public-private partnerships in electronic
record adoption, public disclosure of hospital infection rates in
Europe, standardized metrics for cancer treatment, and private
rulemaking in organ transplantation. These innovations feature a
participatory model of regulation in which multiple stakeholders
collaborate to achieve a common purpose.
Scholars from the United States and the European Union in the fields
of health services research, clinical medicine, political science,
public affairs, law and social work will present and comment on papers
addressing the prospects for new forms of governance in many areas of
the health system.
Friday, Oct. 9, 2009
8 a.m – 4:30 p.m.
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Health Sciences Learning Center
Room 1345
The symposium is open to UW faculty, staff, students, and the
public. No registration is required. Its aim is to promote dialogue
among researchers focused on clinical and translational research and
researchers focused on the system-level structures and policies that
facilitate or inhibit health system improvement and population health.
This event is approved for nine Continuing Legal Education
Credits.
Sponsors
UW School of Medicine and Public Health, including the Wisconsin
Partnership Program and Population Health Institute; UW-Madison
European Union Center for Excellence; UW-Madison Wisconsin Center for
World Affairs and the Global Economy; and the Health Law Section of the
State Bar of Wisconsin.
Also assisting from UW-Madison are the La Follette School of Public
Affairs; Law School Global Legal Studies Center; Institute for Clinical
and Translational Research; Health Innovation Program; and Carbone
Comprehensive Cancer Center.
For further information contact Terry Shelton at 608.262.3038, shelton@lafollette.wisc.edu
or see www.lafollette.wisc.edu/healthgovernance
for abstracts, agenda, speakers, maps and other information.
Schedule
8:00 -- Registration and Coffee
8:30 -- Introduction and Welcome
Professor Carolyn Heinrich, Director, UW La Follette School of Public
Affairs
8:40 -- New Institutions for Governance: Can They Integrate
Systematic Evidence, Tacit Knowledge of Clinicians, and Trust of
Patients?
Is traditional regulation a muddle of confusing rules that prevent
innovation, provide no useful guidance, and impede reform? The
panelists discuss the limits of the prevailing policy tools in the US
and EU.
Moderator: Secy. Karen Timberlake, Wisconsin Department of Health
Services (invited)
Professor Peter Jacobson, University of Michigan School of Public
Health
Professor Scott Greer, University of Michigan School of Public
Health
Commentator: Professor Susan Yackee, La Follette School of Public
Affairs
9:45 -- New Institutions for Governance
Emerging institutions may provide alternatives to improve
health care outcomes. The panelists discuss this through
informatics, quality improvement, and
private/public rulemaking. How do health care
professionals, government officials and the public interact in these
new governance institutions? And how do various modes of interaction
enhance or diminish trust among health care professionals and their
commitment to improvement?
Informatics
Moderator: Rebecca Hutton, Legal Counsel, UW-Madison, Adjunct Law
School
Professor Nicolas Terry, Saint Louis University School of Law
Dr. Maya Das, National Opinion Research Center, University of
Chicago
Discussant: Professor Patricia Brennan, UW School of Engineering,
School of Nursing
10:45 – Break
11:00 -- Quality Improvement Institutions
from Both Sides of the Atlantic: The National Quality Forum and the
National Institute for Clinical Excellence
Moderator: Rebecca Hutton, Legal Counsel, UW-Madison
Professor Bryce Hoflund, University of Nebraska-Omaha School of Public
Administration
Professor Stirling Bryan, University of British Columbia and
University of Birmingham
Discussants: Chris Queram, Wisconsin Collaborative for Healthcare
Quality, and Dr. Sally Kraft, University of Wisconsin Medical
Foundation
12:00 -- Private Rulemaking: An Alternative to Bureaucratic
Rulemaking
Moderator: Rebecca Hutton, UW-Madison Legal Counsel, Adjunct Law
School
Professor David Weimer, La Follette School, “Governance of Organ
Transplantation”
Discussant: Professor Nilo Edwards, UW School of Medicine and Public
Health
12:45 -- Lunch
1:30 -- Smarter Governance in Practice: Disease-Based Case
Studies
How, in theory and in practice, do alternative forms of regulation
work in the health system? These alternatives, including private
rulemaking, management-based regulation (incentives), and traditional
rules and enforcement, will be examined in the areas of prevention and
control of hospital-based infections and the
fight against cancer. What is the influence of new
forms of participation—including patient networks, patient
self-management, and consumer access to medical information—on health
system change with particular attention to the fight against
cancer?
Combating Hospital-Based Infections
Moderator: Gordon Ridley, UW School of Medicine and Public Health
Professor Cary Coglianese, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Commentator: Professor Nasia Safdar, UW School of Medicine and Public
Health
2:15 -- The New Campaign Against Cancer
from Both Sides of the Atlantic: Entrepreneurs, Networks, and Public
Data
Moderator: Gordon Ridley, UW School of Medicine and Public Health
Professor Louise Trubek, UW Law School
Professor Thomas Oliver UW School of Medicine and Public Health
Professor Toby Campbell, UW School of Medicine and Public Health
Researchers Chih-Ming Liang and Matt Mokrohisky
Commentator: Professor Tracy Schroepfer, UW School of Social Work
3:30-- Break
3:45 -- Smarter Governance in Practice in the US and EU: Can
It Work?
How are health system innovations introduced and promoted in different
settings? What external and internal conditions are critical
determinants of successful entrepreneurship in the health system? Is
there optimism that the range of policy instruments now available in
both the US and EU can enhance health care outcomes?
Moderator: Barbara Zabawa, Attorney, Whyte Hirschboeck Dudek,and
Adjunct UW Law School
Commentators: Professor Donald Moynihan, La Follette School, and Rita
Baeton, Researcher, Observatoire Social Européen
4:30-- Adjourn
Symposium Organizers and Editors
Professor Thomas Oliver, Population Health Sciences, UW School of
Medicine and Public Health; Professor Louise Trubek, UW School of
Medicine and Public Health and Clinical Professor Emerita, UW Law
School; Professor David Weimer, Department of Political Science and La
Follette School of Public Affairs