| Literature DB >> 26432790 |
Justin K Benzer1,2,3, Irene E Cramer4,5, James F Burgess6,7, David C Mohr8,9, Jennifer L Sullivan10,11, Martin P Charns12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Integrating health care across specialized work units has the potential to lower costs and increase quality and access to mental health care. However, a key challenge for healthcare managers is how to develop policies, procedures, and practices that coordinate care across specialized units. The purpose of this study was to identify how organizational factors impacted coordination, and how to facilitate implementation of integrated care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26432790 PMCID: PMC4592548 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-015-1079-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Interview questions and specific concepts
| Interview Question | Specific Concepts |
|---|---|
| 1. Imagine that a patient with depression symptoms comes to the clinic. Can you walk me through a typical process of care? | Referral process, differences between diagnoses |
| 2. How has this process changed over the past 10 years? (or since you arrived in the clinic)? | Recent changes, leadership support, referrals, interpersonal interactions, physical structure |
| 3. Tell me about your sense of the need for coordination between primary care and mental health. | Examples of good and poor coordination |
| 4. How would you change your clinic to better coordinate care? | Communication, collaboration, resource barriers |
| 5. Have you or anyone you know had to develop your own coordination procedures to ensure that patients receive the best care? | Work-arounds, ad-hoc coordination procedures |
| 6. Can you tell me about the relationship between the people in the primary care and mental health clinics? | Face to face contact, trust |
| 7. In what situations would you say that teamwork is most important? | Co-workers back each other up |
Note. Each interview question was phrased broadly to allow for participants to respond without imposing a framework upon them. If the responses did not relate to the specific concepts, then the interviewer probed more deeply into those areas
Fig. 1Organizational process antecedents and outcomes of personal and standardized coordination for integrated mental health care. Relationships were suggested by key informant interviews. Dashed arrow indicates that the discrepancies between the current and ideal state of standardized coordination may result in procedure adjustment if supportive personal coordination is present between leaders of different services and/or between frontline staff
Organizational concepts related to coordination between primary care and mental health
| Organizational Concept | Definition | Potential Impact on Integrated Care |
|---|---|---|
| Physical proximity | Distance between the offices of primary care and mental health providers | Promote staff engagement and curbside consults by increasing familiarity |
| Interaction history | The degree to which primary care and mental health providers have established cooperative relationships | Facilitate curbside consults and same-day access when physical proximity is not present. |
| Formal meetings | Inclusion of mental health providers in regularly scheduled primary care meetings | Promote staff engagement by increasing familiarity and communicate regarding patient treatment status |
| Computer-mediated Communication | Use of an “additional signer” process to communicate between providers. | Communicate regarding patient treatment status |
| Leadership priorities | Differences in mission and values between primary care and mental health | Limit integration of referral processes |
| Training | Training to standardize referral procedures Training to standardize skills that support interactions between primary care and mental health | Tailor referrals to needs of both primary care and mental health Increase flexibility in standardized procedures by increasing the number of staff who can complete tasks related to integrated care |
| Unscheduled time | Time slots left open for unanticipated patient needs | Flexibility in standardized procedures allows for curbside consults and same-day access |