| Literature DB >> 23734566 |
Helen Dickinson1, Jon Glasby, Alyson Nicholds, Helen Sullivan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In recent years joint commissioning has assumed an important place in the policy and practice of English health and social care. Yet, despite much being claimed for this way of working there is a lack of evidence to demonstrate the outcomes of joint commissioning. This paper examines the types of impacts that have been claimed for joint commissioning within the literature.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23734566 PMCID: PMC3663657 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-S1-S6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Numbers of items retrieved in literature search
| Stages of literature review process | Number |
|---|---|
| Abstracts identified from initial search of database | 512 |
| Abstracts discarded after application of inclusion and exclusion criteria | 399 |
| Duplicates | 4 |
| Items unable to obtain | 7 |
| Items discarded after reading in full due to lack of relevance | 4 |
| Additional items found through snowballing | 7 |
Types of items retrieved in literature search
| Type of article | Total number found | Percentage of total items retrieved |
|---|---|---|
| 42 | 40 | |
| 27 | 26 | |
| 26 | 25 | |
| 8 | 8 | |
| 2 | 2 | |
| 105 |
Methods used in peer reviewed literature on joint commissioning
| Methodology | Number | References |
|---|---|---|
| Mixed methods (qualitative & quantitative) | 3 | [ |
| Qualitative | 9 | [ |
| Quantitative | 0 | N/A |
| Literature reviews | 2 | [ |
| Case study | 11 | [ |
| Other | 2 | [ |
Discourses of joint commissioning identified through literature search
| Joint commissioning as prevention | Joint commissioning as empowerment | Joint commissioning as efficiency | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deliver preventative services through early intervention. This should in turn reduce inequalities, improve the quality of services and make services more accessible. | This should involve patients, service users and carers in the co-production of services. A user-led approach to care should be adopted that promotes self-care and in doing so transforms health and social care away from being professionally-led. | What is important is improving efficiency and reducing waste and duplication in health and social care services. In turn this should also improve access and performance of services. | |
| Service re-design is important here and thinking about the needs of individuals and providing services around these. A key role for the alignment of strategies and budgets and the development of care pathways. | Personalisation of services plays an important role here with service users being given budgets with which to determine their own care. Fairness, inclusion and respect should be at the heart of all processes. | Increasing the number of providers that are available to health and social care commissioners will give more choice and competition. Greater freedoms and flexibilities for providers and the freedom to innovate should be supported by incentive-based reward and quality will be assured through inspection. | |
| The focus here is around commissioning practices and making full use of the Joint Strategic Needs Assessment to identify gaps in need. | What is important is how we work with service users and carers and the management of complex relationships. Workforce development and training may help with this. | More effective management of information may help to identify waste. What is important is the relationship with providers of care and how these are contracted with and performance managed. | |