| Literature DB >> 26034468 |
Abstract
The NHS and Social Care in England are facing one of the biggest financial challenges for a generation. Commissioners and providers need to work on collaborative schemes to manage the increasing demand on health and social care within a period of financial constraint. Different forms of care co-ordination have been developed at different levels across the world. In the north-west of England, the Trafford health and social care economy have been working through a competitive dialogue process with industry to develop an innovative and dynamic solution to deliver seamless co-ordination for all patients and service users. The strategy is to develop a new Patient Care Co-ordination Centre, which will be responsible for the delivery of co-ordinated, quality care. The Patient Care Co-ordination Centre will work at clinical, service, functional and community levels across multiple providers covering risk stratification, preventative, elective and unscheduled care. I am the clinical lead for the Patient Care Co-ordination Centre and during my year as an Advancing Quality Alliance Integrated Care Fellow, I have had the opportunity to study examples of care coordination from UK and international sites. The learning from these visits has been assimilated into the design process of the Patient Care Co-ordination Centre.Entities:
Keywords: AQuA; Fellowship; patient care co-ordination
Year: 2015 PMID: 26034468 PMCID: PMC4447232 DOI: 10.5334/ijic.2030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Integr Care Impact factor: 5.120
Figure 1.Outline model for Patient Care Co-ordination Centre
Figure 2.“Fulop's typologies of integrated care” (from [9])
(Source: Adapted from Fulop et al. [2])
Common behaviours shared by case studies