Webinar: Podcast Series launch “Perspectives on demystifying payments and health financing for integrated care”

The International Foundation for Integrated Care has defined nine pillars of integrated care based on the evidence accumulated over the last 2 decades.
One of those pillars is Aligned Payments that Promote Integration. This is a difficult subject to understand particularly for policymakers, service managers and health and care professionals working in systems trying to implement integrated care who are not financing and payment experts.
In this webinar to introduce our podcast series, our Chief Executive Dr Niamh Lennox-Chhugani is in conversation with Prof Ellen Nolte, from the School of Health Services and Systems Research at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. Ellen is an expert on health system performance assessment and co-wrote the chapter on Financing of and Reimbursement for Integrated Care in the Handbook of Integrated Care (2nd edition 2021).
This webinar launches the podcast series which features Niamh in conversation with four leading practitioners who have been researching and designing new payment models around the world. They demystify the language of payment models and the different models we see emerging in different countries.
Facilitator

Dr. Niamh Lennox-Chhugani
Chief Executive
International Foundation for Integrated Care (IFIC)

Prof Ellen Nolte
Professor
Health Services and Systems Research
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
Podcast participants




Jacqueline Mallender
Founder
Economic by Design
Executive Committee member
Economic Research Council, UK
Dr Brendan Walsh
Senior Research Officer
Social Research Division
Economic and Social research Institute, Ireland
Dr Jeroen Strujs
Associate Professor
Leiden University Medical Center
Senior researcher
Department of Quality of Care and Health Economics
National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), The Netherlands
Ass Prof Apostolos Tsiachristas
Associate Professor
Health Economics
Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences & Department of Psychiatry,
University of Oxford, UK