ECHO PROJECT

EU project to design a European Health Information System

The ECHO Project has its origins in the year 2002 in Spain with the Atlas VPM Project. This project was a nationwide Health Services Research (HSR) Program concerning the analysis of unwarranted variations in medical practice and healthcare outcomes in Spain. The idea was to compare healthcare geographically – region by region – with a view to giving powerful feedback to policy decision-makers and managers nationwide.

Background

Given the experience with overcoming the technical and administrative hurdles associated with such a project – and also give the clear benefits quickly gained by the participating health authorities; a decision was made to repeat the project on a European scale. This was the origin of the ECHO project – an effort to bring together national hospital databases of several European countries.

Project Coordinator

Enrique Bernal-Delgado MD PhD
Senior Health Services and Policy Researcher
Data Science for Health Services and Policy Research Group
Institute for Health Sciences. IACS

Funding

The ECHO Project received funding from the 7th Framework Programme of the European Union (2010-2014) and from the Health Programme of the European Union (2015-2017)

Mission

ECHO aimed at building a common knowledge infrastructure, based on existing datasets, which ultimately allowed international healthcare performance comparisons. Conceived as a pilot study, ECHO set about the task of bringing together patient-level data from Denmark, England, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain, as well as, contextual information -demographic, socioeconomic, and healthcare supply data.

This knowledge infrastructure allows the evaluation of more than 40 performance indicators, carefully developed to avoid inappropriate cross-country comparisons. The ECHO knowledge infrastructure allows the study of several performance dimensions (equity, effectiveness, safety and efficiency) at international, national, regional, and even provider level.

Vision

The ECHO pilot knowledge infrastructure has proven to be a powerful tool in the assessment of Healthcare Systems Performance across Europe, upgrading the existing experiences and tools on international comparison. Adding more EU countries to the current infrastructure and thus meeting the growing demand for smarter international comparison requires specific EU funding.

Moving forward

ECHO findings have informed decision-makers about in- and cross-country differences in equitable access to healthcare services, uneven effectiveness, quality and safety, and unequal efficiency.

In the context of Bridge-Health, the ECHO principles and methods continued providing insight on how to use administrative data sources in the development of a European Health Information System. The Joint Action InfAct showcasing how to reuse real world data in the systematic analysis of the European Healthcare Systems.

InfAct, who expands Bridge Health achievements, focus on developing the business case and roadmap for the implementation of such a European research infrastructure where the definition and implementation of interoperability principles is paramount.

It is precisely in getting interoperability issues properly solved in the infrastructure where ECHO foreground is serving as the basis for inspiration and development.



ECHO PUBLICATIONS

HandbookMethods used

The ECHO project e-Handbook aims at describing the methods used in the construction of the ECHO Atlas Reports.

Link to the Handbook

IndicatorsDefinition used

Definition used in the Atlas Reports.

Access to the ECHO performance indicators

Quality ReportConstruction of the DWH

This report aims at describing, systematically and in detail, all the steps involved in the construction of the DWH.

Report

ECHO PublicationsPapers and Scripts
Comparison between countriesInteractive Atlas

Comparison between Denmark, Slovenia and Spain

Access to the Health Performance 2014 interactive report

Variation and health performance in Denmark 2014Interactive Atlas
Variation and health performance in Slovenia 2014Interactive Atlas
Variation and health performance in Spain 2014Interactive Atlas
‘Unwarranted variations in health care performance across Europe: Lessons from the ECHO Project‘The European Journal of Public Health 2015

In conjuction with Oxford University Press ECHO has published a supplement in the European Journal of Public Health Volume 25, Issue suppl 1, 01 February 2015: ‘Unwarranted variations in health care performance across Europe: Lessons from the ECHO Project‘, including a number of papers reflecting the work done by ECHO

Atlas Num.3 on Coronary revascularisationECHO Atlas

Atlas Num.3 on Coronary revascularisation Mortality and morbidity from cardiovascular disease are considered a public health issue. In fact, coronary ischaemic disease is one of the leading causes of death in Europe.

CV Denmark      CV England     CV Portugal     CV Slovenia      CV Spain

Atlas Num.2 on Potentially Avoidable Hospitalisations (PAH)ECHO Atlas

The study offers a critical view on how healthcare organizations provide care to patients with chronic conditions. In particular, it signals how effectively they are managed in the ambulatory setting.

PAH Denmark      PAH England     PAH Portugal     PAH Slovenia      PAH Spain

Atlas Num.1 on Lower Value Care (LVC)ECHO Atlas

Health Systems bear substantial opportunity costs by using interventions that are deemed lower-value. Quantifying the utilisation of this type of care and its systematic variation across policy-relevant geographical units offers insight at a glance into the local potential for enhancing efficiency.

LVC Denmark      LVC England     LVC Portugal     LVC Slovenia      LVC Spain



PARTNERS

The ECHO project is a collaboration between several European institutions, each fulfilling a different role in the project beyond the contribution of their national hospital records.

 

Colaborators

The role of the SAB was to advise the ECHO Steering Commitee on the quality of the deliverables of the project, ethical issues, general philosophy and direction of the ECHO project.

The project consortium counted with the expertise of:

Josep Figueres. Director of the European Observatory for health Systems

Eliot S Fisher. Director of Centre for Health Policy Resercha DMS

Alberto Holly. Laussane University

Edward Keley. OMS World Alliance for Patient Safety

Niek Klacinga. Coordinator of OECD HCQI Project

Guillem López-Casanovas. International Health Economic Association

Patrick Romano. University of UC-Davis AHRQ Commissioned Researcher

Klim McPherson. Oxford University

Dirk Van den Stten. European Commission DG SANCO