RM analysis Jukka-Pekka Männikkö: Difference between revisions
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Group 1 DA contains much useful information and seems to be objective and based on facts. The quantitative information provided by the analysis requires more work to provide information which could be used in risk calculations. | Group 1 DA contains much useful information and seems to be objective and based on facts. The quantitative information provided by the analysis requires more work to provide information which could be used in risk calculations. | ||
==Point of view: Common citizen== | |||
===Relevance=== | |||
Content of the analysis seems relevant in comparison to questions the DA is seeking to address. | |||
===Pertinence=== | |||
The analysis is somewhat interesting. It may increase average citizen's trust towards health officials to know that expert analysis shows that the vaccination decision was the right one. | |||
===Usability=== | |||
The analysis is not fully understandable to average citizen. Use of DALY:s to calculate effects of different outcomes may need further explanations. The use of the analysis in practice may be that it will affect the individual vaccination decisions in future. | |||
===Acceptability=== | |||
The analysis is acceptable for average citizen because it seems to be based on facts and objective. | |||
===Overall statement=== | |||
Group 1 DA is perhaps not very interesting to average citizen, but the conclusion is clear. The vaccination decision seems to be the right one, because the result caused least harm even with narcolepsy side effects. Understanding the reasoning behind the result may require clarification. | |||
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Group 2 DA provides much useful information but remains incomplete. Purpose and boundaries of the study plan should be updated. | Group 2 DA provides much useful information but remains incomplete. Purpose and boundaries of the study plan should be updated. | ||
==Point of view: Common citizen== | |||
===Relevance=== | |||
===Pertinence=== | |||
===Usability=== | |||
===Acceptability=== | |||
===Overall statement=== | |||
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DA study of group 3 has useful information and the quality of work is impressive. The calculations require so many uncertain estimates that it does not seem likely that they would be accurate, despite the high quality of the analysis. One factor which has not been considered in the analysis are the limitations to individual freedoms caused by such drastic quarantine measures. It does not seem to be in proportion to the threat caused by swine flu in a country of high quality medical care such as Finland. Effectiveness of thermal scanners and quarantine to control the spread of swine flu is questionable. It is also not likely that passengers would accept being quarantined for days because of fever. Cost and feasibility of thermal scanning and quarantine procedures is not estimated in the analysis and it is an important factor for the Ministry. | DA study of group 3 has useful information and the quality of work is impressive. The calculations require so many uncertain estimates that it does not seem likely that they would be accurate, despite the high quality of the analysis. One factor which has not been considered in the analysis are the limitations to individual freedoms caused by such drastic quarantine measures. It does not seem to be in proportion to the threat caused by swine flu in a country of high quality medical care such as Finland. Effectiveness of thermal scanners and quarantine to control the spread of swine flu is questionable. It is also not likely that passengers would accept being quarantined for days because of fever. Cost and feasibility of thermal scanning and quarantine procedures is not estimated in the analysis and it is an important factor for the Ministry. | ||
==Point of view: Common citizen== | |||
===Relevance=== | |||
===Pertinence=== | |||
===Usability=== | |||
===Acceptability=== | |||
===Overall statement=== | |||
= Decision analysis exercise Group 4 = | = Decision analysis exercise Group 4 = | ||
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The evaluation of the effects of postponing the vaccination decision cannot be made without considering the typical peaking of the epidemics after which they fade away, making further vaccinations useless for the epidemic at hand. The group has not considered this point at all which would be critical for the actual decisions about vaccinations. Suggested result is not backed up by any calculations. Despite these faults the analysis contains much valuable and relevant information about swine flu and DALY:s. | The evaluation of the effects of postponing the vaccination decision cannot be made without considering the typical peaking of the epidemics after which they fade away, making further vaccinations useless for the epidemic at hand. The group has not considered this point at all which would be critical for the actual decisions about vaccinations. Suggested result is not backed up by any calculations. Despite these faults the analysis contains much valuable and relevant information about swine flu and DALY:s. | ||
==Point of view: Common citizen== | |||
===Relevance=== | |||
===Pertinence=== | |||
===Usability=== | |||
===Acceptability=== | |||
===Overall statement=== |
Revision as of 14:38, 11 April 2011
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Take the perspective of the Ministry of Social and Health affairs. Consider yourself managing a project of developing capacity to manage major public health risks. In your project you want to take account of the lessons that could be learned from the swine flu case. In this exercise your task is to:
- Evaluate all four DA study plans from the use/r point of view:
- Of what value would each of the planned analysis be for you?
- Make use of the properties of good assessment framework, particularly:
- Relevance: Is content of the plan/analysis relevant in relation to the stated purpose of the analysis?
- Pertinence: Is the purpose of the analysis relevant in relation your needs?
- Usability: Can you grasp the idea of the plan/analysis? Does it increase your understanding of the swine flu case?
- Acceptability: Would results/conclusions be acceptable to you? Why or why not?
- Give an overall statement: How could/should the results of these analyses be taken into account in your project?
- Choose (one) another perspective and repeat the evaluation of the DA study plans from that perspective
- E.g. common citizen, medical superintendent in a health care center, health researcher, journalist, nurse in public health care, principal of an elementary school, …
- Focus on the differences in comparison to the above evaluation
- Write an (freely formatted) evaluation report on your own RM analysis page (see the list of links at the bottom of the page)
- If you do not yet have a page, create. Advice, if needed, may be asked e.g. from fellow students or the lecturers
- Aim for a clear and concise report.
- Active commenting of of other groups individuals works can earn you pluses that will be considered in the overall grading of the course
- Present your main findings in the final seminar 11.-12.4.
- Improvements on the report page can be made up to the final evaluation in the end of April
EXTRA: also include consideration/evaluation of the example swine flu/narcolepsy model (discussed in 8.4. lecture) in your report/presentation.
Decision analysis exercise Group 1
Point of view: Ministry of Social Affairs and Health
Relevance
Group 1 states evaluating the impact of H1N1 vaccination in Finland as the purpose of their decision analysis. The questions to be addressed are:
1. Was the decision to vaccinate everybody the right one?
and
2. Would it have been better if vaccinations were not done?
Against this background the groups analysis seems relevant. Group 1 evaluates the possible effects and outcomes of the decision to vaccinate the whole population, risk groups only or the possible decision not to vaccinate anyone. Group 1 suggests use of DALY:s to evaluate the impacts of the vaccination decisions.
Pertinence
Decision analysis of group 1 is relevant for the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health. Evaluation of side effects against benefits of the vaccinations is important. It should be noted, however, that no such data would have been available at the time of the actual vaccination decisions.
Usability
Group 1 decision analysis contains much useful information. The calculation of DALY:s requires more work to provide actual quantitative information.
Acceptability
Conclusion of group 1 DA is that the benefits of vaccinations exceed the harmful side-effects caused by the vaccination. The conclusion is drawn based on relevant information about narcolepsy and about the number of cases in Finland. This is acceptable for the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health.
Overall statement
Group 1 DA contains much useful information and seems to be objective and based on facts. The quantitative information provided by the analysis requires more work to provide information which could be used in risk calculations.
Point of view: Common citizen
Relevance
Content of the analysis seems relevant in comparison to questions the DA is seeking to address.
Pertinence
The analysis is somewhat interesting. It may increase average citizen's trust towards health officials to know that expert analysis shows that the vaccination decision was the right one.
Usability
The analysis is not fully understandable to average citizen. Use of DALY:s to calculate effects of different outcomes may need further explanations. The use of the analysis in practice may be that it will affect the individual vaccination decisions in future.
Acceptability
The analysis is acceptable for average citizen because it seems to be based on facts and objective.
Overall statement
Group 1 DA is perhaps not very interesting to average citizen, but the conclusion is clear. The vaccination decision seems to be the right one, because the result caused least harm even with narcolepsy side effects. Understanding the reasoning behind the result may require clarification.
Decision analysis exercise Group 2
Point of view: Ministry of Social Affairs and Health
Relevance
Group 2 states evaluation of impacts of H1N1 vaccination in Finland as the purpose of their DA. Outputs which they will consider are number of new cases of swine flu before and after the vaccination and side effects likely to arise from vaccination. Boundaries are set to priority and target groups. The actual analysis however considers the vaccination of whole population and risk groups. No estimations about number of cases before and after the vaccination is provided. It seems that purpose and boundaries of this DA are not up to date. (10.04.2011)
Pertinence
Group 2 DA contains much useful information for the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health. Decision analysis contains a broad causal diagram which lists many of the affecting factors related to outcomes of vaccinations. Information about calculation of DALY:s is provided.
Usability
Actual quantitative information and results are missing, and thus this DA is not fully usable for the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health. Still, the analysis contains valuable information for the Ministry.
Acceptability
Results of the DA are not provided, although the content so far seems relevant. Group 2 states in their DA background chapter, that their aim is to "support the decision to vaccinate by weighing the rationale at various levels of the decision chain". This raises a question about the objectivity of this kind of analysis which is aiming to a certain result from the beginning.
Overall statement
Group 2 DA provides much useful information but remains incomplete. Purpose and boundaries of the study plan should be updated.
Point of view: Common citizen
Relevance
Pertinence
Usability
Acceptability
Overall statement
Decision analysis exercise Group 3
Point of view: Ministry of Social Affairs and Health
Relevance
Purpose of Group 3 DA is to answer the following question:
Can the use of thermal scanners combined with PCR tests prevent the spreading of swine flu to Finland if all passengers arriving from abroad will be scanned at the border control points?
The DA contains relevant information about scanners and the factors affecting the spread of swine flu.
Pertinence
It seems unlikely that this DA would be relevant to the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health. Use of thermal scanners is a costly procedure and it does not seem likely that it would be effective. Swine flu can spread in the airplane and the newly infected people would not have fever yet. There are also considerations about limiting individual freedoms which must be taken in account.
Usability
Group 3 DA contains relevant information about swine flu and the analysis overall is impressive. Calculations are very interesting but it seems likely that they have too many uncertainties to be usable by the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health.
Acceptability
The quality of information in the group 3 DA seems acceptable for the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health. It is, however, very unlikely, that the use of thermal scanners and quarantine of travelers with fever would be acceptable for the Ministry or the people subjected to these measures. It does not seem to be in proportion to the threat caused by swine flu.
Overall statement
DA study of group 3 has useful information and the quality of work is impressive. The calculations require so many uncertain estimates that it does not seem likely that they would be accurate, despite the high quality of the analysis. One factor which has not been considered in the analysis are the limitations to individual freedoms caused by such drastic quarantine measures. It does not seem to be in proportion to the threat caused by swine flu in a country of high quality medical care such as Finland. Effectiveness of thermal scanners and quarantine to control the spread of swine flu is questionable. It is also not likely that passengers would accept being quarantined for days because of fever. Cost and feasibility of thermal scanning and quarantine procedures is not estimated in the analysis and it is an important factor for the Ministry.
Point of view: Common citizen
Relevance
Pertinence
Usability
Acceptability
Overall statement
Decision analysis exercise Group 4
Point of view: Ministry of Social Affairs and Health
Relevance
Group 4 states that purpose of their DA is to answer the following question:
Would the consequences of the swine flu epidemic be less harmful if the vaccination of the population would be postponed and reconsidereded after proper testing and extensive hygiene campaign, than if the whole population would be vaccinated immediately?
The analysis is relevant in relation to this purpose set by the group. The DA contains much information about effects of decision variables and their relations. Still, group 3 DA lacks some critical points of view like the typical epidemic "peak" of new infections which is important to take in account when considering postponing the vaccinations.
Pertinence
Group 3 DA has much information which is relevant to the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health. There are some points of view missing, which would be relevant, like the seasonal variation of epidemics.
Usability
Although there is much usable information about DALY:s and possible calculations, this DA lacks the actual calculations. Hygiene campaign is not determined accurately, and no actual actions are suggested. Quantitative information which would be important for actual decisions is not provided.
Acceptability
Issues considered in group 3 DA are relevant and there is much information about DALY:s. The group suggests as a result that postponing the vaccination decision would result in a better outcome than if the whole population would be vaccinated immediately. Group 3 states they "believe" that the number of DALY:s would be greater in case of immediate vaccinations. No calculations to back this belief up are provided. It seems that the group has made its conclusions without any actual calculations and thus the result is not acceptable as such.
Overall statement
The evaluation of the effects of postponing the vaccination decision cannot be made without considering the typical peaking of the epidemics after which they fade away, making further vaccinations useless for the epidemic at hand. The group has not considered this point at all which would be critical for the actual decisions about vaccinations. Suggested result is not backed up by any calculations. Despite these faults the analysis contains much valuable and relevant information about swine flu and DALY:s.