| Literature DB >> 28882135 |
Marie-Pascale Pomey1, Nathalie Clavel2, Claudia Amar2, Juan Carlos Sabogale-Olarte2, Claudia Sanmartin3, Carolyn De Coster4, Tom Noseworthy5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Canada, long waiting times for core specialized services have consistently been identified as a key barrier to access. Governments and organizations have responded with strategies for better access management, notably for total joint replacement (TJR) of the hip and knee. While wait time management strategies (WTMS) are promising, the factors which influence their sustainable implementation at the organizational level are understudied. Consequently, this study examined organizational and systemic factors that made it possible to sustain waiting times for TJR within federally established limits and for at least 18 months or more.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28882135 PMCID: PMC5590149 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2568-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Factors that can have impact on WTMS at the local and contextual levels [36]
Integrated model of unintended consequences within healthcare organizations
| ANTICIPATED | UNANTICIPATED | |
|---|---|---|
| DESIRABLE | Goals and intended consequences | Serendipities |
| UNDESIRABLE | Trade-offs | Negative consequences |
Source: Bloomrosen et al. [15] and Rogers [16]
Case profiles
| Case 1 | Case 2 | Case 3 | Case 4 | Case 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Status | Non-sustainable | Moderate | Moderate | Sustainable | Sustainable |
| Location | Atlantic Canada | Central Canada | Western Canada | Central Canada | Central Canada |
| Type of HCO | Tertiary-care teaching hospital | Community teaching hospital | Secondary-care hospital | Tertiary-care teaching hospital | Community teaching hospital |
| Implementation date | 2008 | 2007 | 2009 | 2007 | 2007 |
| Types of WTMS | Contract with the authority and the HCO to do 500 additional orthopedic surgeries | Pathway | Regional Central Intake (based on Patient Access Registry Tool (PART) | Regional Steering Committee implementing a comprehensive hip and knee replacement program (HKRP) | Central Intake |
Case 1 (Atlantic Canada) - Factors affecting WTMS sustainability and unintended consequences
| Organizational factors | |
|---|---|
| Governance | - Lack of incentives to encourage staff engagement (including nurses): “ |
| Culture | - Physicians not all engaged and cultural gap between senior and junior surgeons: “ |
| Methods and tools | - Public website informing patients and families about TJR wait times (within hospitals in the region) |
| Resources | - Increased resources allocated for renovation of assessment clinic, booking and registration system, clinical staff, patient information website, increased OR time |
| Main contextual factors | |
| - Insufficient funding considering large proportion of population with arthritis in the province: “ | |
| Unintended consequences | |
| Serendipities | - Development of new educational programs for others patients: |
| Negative consequences | - Increased wait times resulting from public awareness and patient’s preferences (times and surgeons): “ |
Case 2 (Central Canada) - Factors affecting WTMS sustainability and unintended consequences
| Organizational factors | |
|---|---|
| Governance | - Good support from middle managers in helping physicians find solutions and implement them |
| Culture | - Tension between different types of physicians and between physicians and OR nurses/anesthesiologists |
| Methods and tools | - Province-wide wait time system software (iPort) that provides self-service reporting of wait times, as previously existing system was inadequate: “ |
| Resources | - Inefficient utilization of OR rooms, |
| Main contextual factors | |
| - Health region support for professionals to improve data collection and interpretation. | |
| Unintended consequences | |
| Serendipities | - Model for other programs to improve referral processes and dialogue with GPs: “ |
| Negative consequences | - Increases in wait time due to double referrals |
Case 3 (Western Canada) - Factors affecting WTMS sustainability and unintended consequences
| Organizational factors | |
|---|---|
| Governance | - High support and governance from RHA level |
| Culture | - Physician engagement, leadership and innovative culture within the Hip and Knee Institute |
| Methods and tools | - RHA developed Patient Access Registry Tool (PART) to reconcile and monitor patient wait lists |
| Resources | - Increased human resource staffing: clinical assistants for OR, staff for pre-habilitation clinic |
| Unintended consequences | |
| Main contextual factors | |
| - RHA funding to increase volumes of TJR | |
| Serendipities | - Model for other programs and specialties |
| Negative consequences | - Increases in wait time due to patient and GP misunderstanding of the referral process and patient’s preferences (times and surgeons): “ |
Case 4 (Central Canada) - Factors affecting WTMS sustainability and unintended consequences
| Organizational factors | |
|---|---|
| Governance | - Strong leadership from hospital CEO and upper management |
| Culture | - Hospital mainly dedicated to elective orthopedic surgeries |
| Methods and tools | - Central intake clinic and referral tracking system (provincial wait time information system) |
| Resources | - Increased staffing allocated; more nurses assigned to the OR to support higher volume of TJR |
| Main contextual factors | |
| - Government funding to increase the volume of TJR | |
| Unintended consequences | |
| Serendipities | - Greater trust between surgeons and APPs: “ |
| Negative consequences | - Work overload for nurses |
Case 5 (Central Canada) - Factors affecting WTMS sustainability and unintended consequences
| Organizational factors | |
|---|---|
| Governance | - Surgeons, staff and middle and top managers aligned toward the same goal: treating people in as excellent a way as possible |
| Culture | - Culture of innovation and managers’ sense of responsibility to the population and patients: “ |
| Methods and tools | - Letter of non-availability; standardized preadmission form |
| Resources | - Increased staffing (nurses and physical rehabilitation technicians) allocated: “ |
| Main contextual factors | |
| - Significant government funding to increase the volume of TJR | |
| Unintended consequences | |
| Serendipities | - Strengthening of collaboration between clinical and administrative management throughout the establishment: “ |