TY - JOUR T1 - Leveraging financial incentives and behavioural economics to engage physicians in achieving quality-improvement process measures JF - Canadian Journal of Surgery JO - CAN J SURG SP - E290 LP - E295 DO - 10.1503/cjs.017320 VL - 65 IS - 2 AU - Husein Moloo AU - Tyler Lamb AU - Sudhir Sundaresan AU - Kednapa Thavorn AU - Caolan Walsh AU - Reilly Musselman AU - Alan Forster Y1 - 2022/04/27 UR - http://canjsurg.ca/content/65/2/E290.abstract N2 - Background: Dedicated quality-improvement (QI) initiatives within health care systems are of clear benefit, and physicians respond to financial incentivization. The Canadian health care system often lacks this lever, and many financially incentivized QI programs rely on traditional economic principles. We describe our evaluation of financial incentivization for the implementation of QI process metrics in a department of surgery at a Canadian academic hospital system and its impact over a 4-year period.Methods: Quality-improvement processes informed by extant QI incentivization literature and guided by the principles of behavioural economics were implemented within our institution’s Department of Surgery. Disbursement of supplemental government funding was modified to be contingent on the ability of divisions within the department to meet predefined QI metrics, including regular multidisciplinary meetings, morbidity and mortality rounds with documented feedback of systemic issues to division members, reviews of adverse events, and implementation of annual patient experience projects. We evaluated the effect of the QI processes from 2015/16 to 2018/19.Results: There was a significant increase in the number of divisions that satisfied all the QI metrics over the study period, from 2 (28%) in 2015/16, to 5 (71%) in 2016/17, to 7 (100.0%) in 2017/18 and 2018/19 (p < 0.01). The application of behavioural economics principles, such as reward versus penalty payoff, loss aversion, payment separation, aligning of values, and relative social ranking, was important to the outcome of the study.Conclusion: Incentivizing QI activities in the Canadian health care system is possible and led to improvement in QI processes as a whole in our department. This paper lays out a method of financial reimbursement to facilitate engagement of physicians and establishment of a foundation of important QI processes and measures within a department. ER -