Low-value care contributes to poor quality of care and wasteful spending in healthcare systems. In Verkerk and colleagues’ recent qualitative study, interviews with low-value care experts from Canada, the United States, and the Netherlands identified a broad range of nationally relevant social, system, and knowledge factors that promote ongoing use of low-value care. These factors highlight the complexity of the problem that is persistent use of low-value care and how it is heavily influenced by public and medical culture as well as healthcare system features. This commentary discusses how these findings integrate within current low-value care and de-implementation literature and uses specific low-value care examples to highlight the importance of considering context, culture, and clinical setting when considering how to apply these factors to future de-implementation initiatives.
CITATION STYLE
Sypes, E. E., Leigh, J. P., Stelfox, H. T., & Niven, D. J. (2022, August 1). Context, Culture, and the Complexity of De-Implementing Low-Value Care Comment on “Key Factors that Promote Low-Value Care: Views of Experts From the United States, Canada, and the Netherlands.” International Journal of Health Policy and Management. Kerman University of Medical Sciences. https://doi.org/10.34172/ijhpm.2022.6968
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