| Literature DB >> 21819608 |
Leonie Segal1, Matthew J Leach.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The delivery of best practice care can markedly improve clinical outcomes in patients with chronic disease. While the provision of a skilled, multidisciplinary team is pivotal to the delivery of best practice care, the occupational or skill mix required to deliver this care is unclear; it is also uncertain whether such a team would have the capacity to adequately address the complex needs of the clinic population. This is the role of needs-based health workforce planning. The objective of this article is to describe the development of an evidence-informed, needs-based health workforce model to support the delivery of best-practice interdisciplinary chronic disease management in the primary and community care setting using diabetes as a case exemplar. DISCUSSION: Development of the workforce model was informed by a strategic review of the literature, critical appraisal of clinical practice guidelines, and a consensus elicitation technique using expert multidisciplinary clinical panels. Twenty-four distinct patient attributes that require unique clinical competencies for the management of diabetes in the primary care setting were identified. Patient attributes were grouped into four major themes and developed into a conceptual model: the Workforce Evidence-Based (WEB) planning model. The four levels of the WEB model are (1) promotion, prevention, and screening of the general or high-risk population; (2) type or stage of disease; (3) complications; and (4) threats to self-care capacity. Given the number of potential combinations of attributes, the model can account for literally millions of individual patient types, each with a distinct clinical team need, which can be used to estimate the total health workforce requirement.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21819608 PMCID: PMC3163196 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-6-93
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Figure 1Needs-based workforce planning framework. FTE - Full-time equivalent.
Figure 2Workforce Evidence-Based (WEB) model for diabetes, with prevalence data*#. *Data represent the number of cases per 10,000 persons with diabetes, which, based on an estimated prevalence rate of known diabetes of 4% [19], equates to a total population of 250,000 persons. #Prevalence data are derived from the Australian Bureau of Statistics National Health Survey (2007-2008) [19], unless specified otherwise. aAustralian diabetes, obesity, and lifestyle study (1999/00) [21,22]; bFrench, Canadian, German, and U.S. surveys of persons aged 16 years and older with any type of diabetes [24-28]; cAmsterdam survey of adults aged 40-94 years with any type of diabetes [29]; dAustralian hospital admission data [23]; eU.S. surveys of persons aged 18 years and older with any type of diabetes [30-32]; fGerman survey of persons aged 18 years and older with any type of diabetes [33]; gAustralian Bureau of Statistics birth data (2007) [34].
Figure 3Example of a clinical care protocol--the "impaired physical ability" module of the WEB model.