Publications

International variation in drug usage: An exploratory analysis of the "causes" of variation (2014)

The changing hospital landscape: An exploration of international experiences (2014)

Regulating quality and safety of health and social care (2014)

Pharmaceutical pricing: the use of external reference pricing (2013)

Use of outcome metrics to measure quality in education and training of healthcare professionals (2012)

Preventing emergency readmissions to hospital. A scoping review (2012)

How health systems make available information on service providers (2011)

International variation in the usage of medicines (2010)

Funding intensive care – approaches in systems using diagnosis-related groups (2010)

International benchmarking of healthcare quality (2010)

Coverage of publicly-funded dental services (2009)

Paying for drugs in the statutory system (2008)

Learning from other countries: an on-call facility for health care policy (2008)

Decision-making in health care: Roles and responsibilities at local, regional and national level (2008)

Health care capacity planning: a review of international experience

A review of the role and responsibilities of national ministries of health in five countries (2007)

The regulation of competition between publicly-financed hospitals (2007)

The systematic use of cost-effectiveness criteria to inform reviews of publicly-funded benefits packages (2007)

Reimbursing highly specialised hospital services: the experience of activity-based funding in eight countries (2006)

Access to generalist and specialist care outside hospital (2006)

The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine is Britain’s national school of public health and a leading postgraduate institute worldwide for research and postgraduate education in global health.

DISCLAIMER: The ‘On-call’ Facility for International Healthcare Comparisons’ is funded by the Department of Health in England through its Policy Research Programme (grant no. 0510002). The information provided and views expressed on this website are those of the project’s researchers and do not necessarily represent those of the Department of Health. The research team is fully responsible for any errors