Literature DB >> 12849913

Breaking down barriers: integrating health and care services for older people in England.

Caroline Glendinning1.   

Abstract

Like many other post-industrial societies, England is facing demographic and political pressures to reduce the fragmentation of services for older people. Moreover, current government policies emphasise collaboration and 'partnership', particularly between health and social care services. Recently, two new policy initiatives have enabled the full integration of services to take place, involving formerly separate health and social care organisations-between family doctors (general practitioners) and community health services, and between health and social services organisations. Both initiatives also allow the pooling of previously separate funding streams. This paper presents findings from evaluations of these two initiatives. Drawing on this evidence, the paper concludes that structural integration can transform preoccupations over narrow sectoral responsibilities and boundaries to a 'whole systems' paradigm of service planning and delivery. However, major internal barriers to integration may remain: these include professional domains and identities, and differential power relationships between newly integrated services and professionals. Moreover, the success of these new horizontal, inter-organisational arrangements is profoundly influenced by the wider policy environment and by vertical relationships with national government. Together, these pressures exclude the voices of older people, and therefore call into question whether the considerable organisational upheaval of service integration will be able to deliver the changes valued by older people themselves.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12849913     DOI: 10.1016/s0168-8510(02)00205-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Policy        ISSN: 0168-8510            Impact factor:   2.980


  42 in total

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4.  Segmentation of family medicine.

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5.  Do 'virtual wards' reduce rates of unplanned hospital admissions, and at what cost? A research protocol using propensity matched controls.

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6.  Implementing a continuum of care model for older people-results from a Swedish case study.

Authors:  Anna Dunér; Staffan Blomberg; Henna Hasson
Journal:  Int J Integr Care       Date:  2011-11-18       Impact factor: 5.120

7.  Faces of integration.

Authors:  Paul Williams; Helen Sullivan
Journal:  Int J Integr Care       Date:  2009-12-22       Impact factor: 5.120

8.  The integration of occupational therapy into primary care: a multiple case study design.

Authors:  Catherine Donnelly; Christie Brenchley; Candace Crawford; Lori Letts
Journal:  BMC Fam Pract       Date:  2013-05-16       Impact factor: 2.497

9.  Integrated care for frail elderly compared to usual care: a study protocol of a quasi-experiment on the effects on the frail elderly, their caregivers, health professionals and health care costs.

Authors:  Isabelle Natalina Fabbricotti; Benjamin Janse; Wilhelmina Mijntje Looman; Ruben de Kuijper; Jeroen David Hendrikus van Wijngaarden; Auktje Reiffers
Journal:  BMC Geriatr       Date:  2013-04-12       Impact factor: 3.921

10.  An organisational analysis of the implementation of telecare and telehealth: the whole systems demonstrator.

Authors:  Jane Hendy; Theopisti Chrysanthaki; James Barlow; Martin Knapp; Anne Rogers; Caroline Sanders; Peter Bower; Robert Bowen; Ray Fitzpatrick; Martin Bardsley; Stanton Newman
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2012-11-15       Impact factor: 2.655

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