| Literature DB >> 27369357 |
Wendy Kemper-Koebrugge1, Jan Koetsenruijter2, Anne Rogers3, Miranda Laurant4,2, Michel Wensing2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Local collaboration of community organisations and healthcare organisations is seen as relevant for the efficiency and efficacy of health and social care because of their potential role in providing social involvement which may reduce the need for the utilisation of formal services. Care organisations connect to each other in different ways, thus comprising an organisational network. This study aimed to describe and explore organisational networks with respect to their activities for people with diabetes mellitus type 2 and potential mechanisms of effective collaboration. Collaboration could include, for example, referring to each other and organising activities together. Potential mechanisms are navigation, negotiation and contagion.Entities:
Keywords: Collaboration; Integrated care; Mixed methods; Social network analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27369357 PMCID: PMC4930621 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-016-2135-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Assumed links between network related mechanisms and network measures
| Network related mechanism | Network measure | Definition | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Navigation | Number of connections | ||
| 1 step reach (min–max) | The mean of the number of organisations in the network that are reached within one step | Higher one step reach indicates more knowledge of possibilities to navigate | |
| 2 step reach (min–max) | The mean of the number of organisations in the whole network that are within reach of two directed steps | Higher two step reach indicates more knowledge of possibilities to navigate | |
| Negotiation | Reciprocity | The extent to which ties are reciprocated | Higher reciprocity indicates more potential coordination of activities |
| Contagion | Density | The proportion of all possible connections in a network that are actually present | Higher density indicates shared decisions |
| Centrality | The degree that a network is organized around a single organisation | Higher centrality indicates key players, which indicates more social influence from key players |
Characteristics of participating organisations
| Number of organisations | Consisting of | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Professional organisations | Mixed organisations | Volunteer organisations | ||
| Urban region | 22 | 11 well being | 6 well being | |
| 1 healthcare | 3 patient rights | |||
| 1 lifestyle related | ||||
| Total 12 | Total 10 | |||
| Rural region | 13 | 4 well being | 2 healthcare | 1 well being |
| 2 healthcare | 2 patient rights | |||
| 2 life style related | ||||
| Total 6 | Total 2 | Total 5 | ||
Fig. 1Network of organisations rural region. Black filled square professional; dark grey filled square mixed; light grey filled square volunteer; Filled circle mentioned by respondents, not interviewed
Fig. 2Network of organisations urban region. Black filled square professional; dark grey filled square mixed; light grey filled square volunteer; Filled circle mentioned by respondents, not interviewed
Network measures
| Urban | Rural | |
|---|---|---|
| Total number of participating organisations | 22 | 13 |
| Navigation | ||
| Number of connections | 46 | 16 |
| 1 step reach (min–max): number of organisations reached in 1 steps | 2.09 (0–9) | 1.23 (0–3) |
| 2 step reach (min–max): number of organisations reached in 2 steps | 6.18 (0–13) | 2.46 (0–6) |
| Negotiation | ||
| Reciprocity | 0.17 | 0.00 |
| Contagion | ||
| Density | 0.1 | 0.1 |
| Centrality (%) | 36.2 | 17.4 |