| Literature DB >> 29523092 |
Sietske M Grol1, Gerard R M Molleman2,3, Anne Kuijpers2, Rob van der Sande4, Gerdine A J Fransen2,3, Willem J J Assendelft2, Henk J Schers2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the western world, a growing number of the older people live at home. In the Netherlands, GPs are expected to play a pivotal role in the organization of integrated care for this patient group. However, little is known about how GPs can play this role best. Our aim for this study was to unravel how GPs can play a successful role in elderly care, in particular in multidisciplinary teams, and to define key concepts for success.Entities:
Keywords: Focus groups; Frail older people; General practitioner; Integrated health care systems; Leadership; Multidisciplinary team meetings; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29523092 PMCID: PMC5845178 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-018-0726-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Features of multidisciplinary teams and multidisciplinary team meetings
| Team 1 ( | Team 2 ( | Team 3 ( | Team 4 ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caregivers, attending focus-group interviews | 1 GP | 1 GP | 1 GP | 2 GPs |
| 1 practice nurse | 3 community nurses | 2 practice nurses | 2 practices nurses | |
| 3 community nurses | 2 NHPSs | 3 community nurses | 2 community nurses | |
| 2 physiotherapists | 1 occupational therapist | 1 mental health nurse | 2 NHPSs | |
| 1 occupational therapist | 1 welfare worker | 2 physiotherapists | 2 welfare workers | |
| 2 welfare workers | 1 health broker | 1 welfare worker | 1 centre manager | |
| 1 dietician | 1 health broker | |||
| Service area multidisciplinary team | 4800 patients | 2150 patients | 7000 patients | 38,000 patients |
| Demographic features | Village with 22,555 inhabitants, 15% = 65+ years | Deprived neighbourhood in a medium-sized city with 168,292 inhabitants, 14% = 65+ years | Commuters; neighbourhood with old village centre in medium-sized city with 168,292 inhabitants, 14% = 65+ years | Small town with 41,775 inhabitants, 15% = 65+ years |
| GP setting | General practice | General practice | Health centre | Health centre |
| Features of the MTM | ||||
| | 2014 | 2011 | 1961 | 2011 |
| | GP | GP | GP | NHPS |
| | Frail older people, 65+ years | Frail older people, 75+ years, exceptions allowed | Frail older people, 70+ years, exceptions allowed | Frail older people, 65+ years |
| | Screening | Screening | Case-finding | Case-finding |
| | Case manager, care plan | Case manager, care plan, minutes, EPR, Care and Welfare Information Portal (ZWIP) | Case manager, minutes, EPR, Care and Welfare Information Portal (ZWIP) | Care plan, EPR |
| | Research subsidy | Care programme by health insurer | Health insurer, funding for health centres | Research subsidy, local community health services |
| | Practice nurse | Community nurse | Practice nurse | Practice nurse |
| | 1 × 3 months | 1 × month | 1 × month | On indication |
EPR electronic patient record, GP general practitioner, MTM multidisciplinary team meeting, NHPS nursing home physician specialist, ZWIP Zorg- en WelzijnsInfoPortaal
GPs’ key concepts for multidisciplinary elderly care teams – ‘GPs see the bigger picture’
| 1. Key concepts | Starting teams | Experienced teams | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Networking | → | Establishing contacts with community partners, health insurers, hospitals, social services | → | Developing and maintaining contacts |
| 2. | Facilitating | → | Choosing an EPR, negotiating with health insurers and social and care services, setting up an MTM | → | Adjusting MTM to demands of time, quality improvement |
| 3. | Team building | → | Team composition (type of professionals, selection of organizations, competencies, personality), distribution of tasks and responsibilities, improve connection among professionals | → | Encouragement of team members, equivalence between team members and GP(s) |
| 4. | Integrating care | → | Coordination of care in the medical domain, keeping an overview of care, connecting domains (hospitals, primary care, nursing homes, social services, community services, prevention) | → | Prevention of decline / preservation of functioning, keeping an overview, delivering proactive care. |
| 5. | Leadership | → | Passion for care for older people, clear vision, endurance, drive, taking responsibility | → | Focusing on medical domain, background position, relying on skills of team members, coordination of care |
EPR electronic patient record, GP general practitioner, MTM multidisciplinary team meeting
Topic list of focus groups and interviews
| Category | Questions |
|---|---|
| Institutional factors1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1. | 1. Is there joint policy concerning integrated elderly care? Are objectives defined concerning integrated elderly care? |
| 2. In what way are patients involved in the organization of care? | |
| 3. Is the target group of older people delineated? Was screening or case finding used in the elderly population? | |
| 4. Who are the stakeholders of the GPs in integrated care for the elderly population? | |
| 5. In the multidisciplinary team, what agreements are in writing concerning the organization of integrated care for older people? | |
| 6. What are the effects of structural consultation among professionals from care and welfare organizations? | |
| 7. What are the effects of health care professionals working under one roof? | |
| 8. Does consultation between the multidisciplinary team and care insurers regarding older people take place? What agreements have been made on the funding of integrated elderly care? Is finance of influence on the partnership? In what way? | |
| 9. Does consultation between the multidisciplinary team and the municipality regarding older people take place? In what way? | |
| 10. Is there systematic evaluation and improvement? | |
| 11. Is available knowledge being used? (Guidelines, protocols.) | |
| (Inter)personal factors1.1.1.1.1.1. | 12. What are the differences in values, beliefs, and attitudes concerning (a) the integrated elderly care team and (b) the other network partners? |
| 13. Self-efficacy: do professionals feel confident about themselves and each other as collaborator? | |
| 14. Social identity: do partners also perceive a shared identity? | |
| 15. Nature of interpersonal relationships: do partners get along well with each other as collaborators? | |
| 16. Can you describe the role of the GP in the development of integrated elderly care? | |
| 17. Can you describe the role of the NHPS in the development of integrated elderly care? | |
| 18. Are there any agreements on taking the lead/control in integrated elderly care? | |
| Factors concerning the organization of multidisciplinary teams | 19. Flexible timeframe: is time and flexibility available for the development of integrated elderly care? How do you make time? |
| 20. How is (multidisciplinary) consultation organized in the multidisciplinary team? (Frequency, composition, agenda, etc.) Are MTMs minuted? Are agreements transferable to colleagues? | |
| 21. Shared mission: did partners agreed on a shared mission, goals, and plan of action? | |
| 22. Do team members agree on distribution of roles and responsibilities? | |
| 23. Can you describe the influence of the collaboration between the GP and the practice nurse on the development of integrated elderly care? | |
| 24. Do team members build on each other’s capacities? | |
| 25. Are facilities for formal and informal communication in place? | |
| 26. What are the characteristics of the management of the multidisciplinary team (neutral, facilitating, empowering)? | |
| 27. Are the results of the personal and the team effort to the team members visible? |
GP general practitioner, MTM multidisciplinary team meeting, NHPS nursing home physician specialist