The Wennberg International Collaborative

David C. Goodman, MD, MS The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice

Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development April 2013 What is the Wennberg International Collaborative?

The Wennberg International Collaborative is a research network committed to improving healthcare by examining organisational and regional variation in resources, utilization, and outcomes.

We are a global community of scholars interested in comparative measurement particularly across a country's regions and health care organisations. Our goal is to advance the understanding of the causes and consequences of unwarranted variation (i.e. variation in health care not explained by differences in population needs or preferences) around the world, leading to clinical improvement and policy change.

Wennberg International Collaborative

WIC Attendees by Country

2010 2011 2012 2013 – to be held at Dartmouth Australia 1 2 2 Canada 2 2 3 Czech Republic 1 Denmark 1 Finland 1 France 2 2 2 Germany 2 6 5 Italy 2 1 2 Japan 2 2 Kosovo 1 1 1 Netherlands 1 2 2 New Zealand 1 1 Norway 1 1 2 Slovenia 1 Spain 2 2 2 Switzerland 1 2 2 7 13 13 United States 5 8 9 Total 27 45 52 75 - 100 2012 WIC meeting Research Reports • From Data to Decisions? Exploring commissioners’ responses to the NHS Atlas of Variation in Healthcare in Laura Schang | London School of Economics and Political Science | London, UK • Making sense of regional variation in mental Zeynep Or | Institute for Research & Information in Health Economics | Paris, France • The geography of cardiovascular disease drug therapy adherence in Aotearoa New Zealand Daniel Exeter | University of Auckland | Auckland, New Zealand • Determinants of quality, cost and access variation in cerebral and cardiovascular care Yuichi Imanaka | Kyoto University | Kyoto, Japan • How to manage geographic variation in a Beveridge model healthcare system: Some proposals from Italy Sabina Nuti | Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna | Pisa, Italy

2012 WIC meeting Research Reports (continued) • Variation in the time course of the use of health interventions: Two Chapters of a longer story Philipp Storez-Pfennig | Abteilung Medizin | Berlin, Germany • What could medical practice variations analysis contribute in informing disinvestment strategies? Sandra Garcia-Armesto | Institute for Health Sciences in Aragón | Zaragoza, Spain • Do mothers decide? The impact of preferences in health care Jostein Grytten | University of Oslo | Oslo, Norway

Methodological Challenges • Patient attribution – areas, , or what? David Goodman | The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice | Hanover NH, US • A new patient attribution method: Physician- Networks Julie Bynum | The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice | Hanover NH, US • Risk Adjustment with Administrative Data Jack Wennberg | The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice | Hanover NH, US

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