| Literature DB >> 28802446 |
Nicole E Werner1, Seema Malkana2, Ayse P Gurses3, Bruce Leff4, Alicia I Arbaje5.
Abstract
We aim to highlight the importance of using a process-level view in analyzing distributed healthcare tasks through a case study analysis of medication management (MM). MM during older adults' hospital-to-skilled-home-healthcare (SHHC) transitions is a healthcare process with tasks distributed across people, organizations, and time. MM has typically been studied at the task level, but a process-level is needed to fully understand and improve MM during transitions. A process-level view allows for a broader investigation of how tasks are distributed throughout the work system through an investigation of interactions and the resultant emergent properties. We studied MM during older adults' hospital-to-SHHC transitions through interviews and observations with 60 older adults, their 33 caregivers, and 79 SHHC providers at 5 sites associated with 3 SHHC agencies. Study findings identified key cross-system characteristics not observable at the task-level: (1) identification of emergent properties (e.g., role ambiguity, loosely-coupled teams performing MM) and associated barriers; and (2) examination of barrier propagation across system boundaries. Findings highlight the importance of a process-level view of healthcare delivery occurring across system boundaries.Entities:
Keywords: Frail elderly; Home care agencies; Medication management; Process; Sociotechnical system; System boundaries; Transitional care; Work system
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28802446 PMCID: PMC8284998 DOI: 10.1016/j.apergo.2017.06.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Ergon ISSN: 0003-6870 Impact factor: 3.661