| Literature DB >> 29686734 |
Nicola J Roberts1, Mike Ward2, Irem Patel3, Janelle Yorke4, Martyn R Partridge5.
Abstract
The concept of integrated care has been advocated for many years to address some of the challenges faced by the NHS. This report examines the experiences of respiratory healthcare specialists working in an integrated role. Twelve qualitative telephone interviews were undertaken with a range of integrated respiratory specialists and their teams working in both hospitals and the community. A descriptive and thematic approach to data analysis was adopted. Participants were very enthusiastic about their roles and saw themselves as ambassadors for this new way of working. Several key themes were identified from the analysis which participants identified as barriers or enablers to the successful undertaking of an integrated respiratory specialist role. These included the participants' previous work experience and background, the range of multi-disciplinary expertise within or needed for the team, the structure of the team leadership and the measurement of outcomes to evaluate the team. Participants identified the need for clear job descriptions and roles, shared training and standards and appropriate outcome evaluation. More research is needed to understand how these new ways of working are developing and how they can be evaluated.Entities:
Keywords: Integrated care; consultant role; respiratory
Year: 2018 PMID: 29686734 PMCID: PMC5901419 DOI: 10.1080/17571472.2017.1421020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: London J Prim Care (Abingdon) ISSN: 1757-1472
Components of an integrated respiratory service.
| Multidisciplinary team meetings | Weekly in patient ( |
| Yes ( | |
| Community clinics | Yes ( |
| Hospital based ( | |
| No ( | |
| Not at the moment ( | |
| Virtual clinics | Email service ( |
| Yes ( | |
| MDT meeting ( | |
| Virtual ward round ( | |
| No ( | |
| Education for community staff | Yes ( |
| Domiciliary visits | Yes ( |
| Producing clinical guidance for avoidance/other pathways | Yes ( |
| Supporting quality assured spirometry | Trained ( |
| Provide training and education ( | |
| Yes within rehab ( | |
| Respiratory reviews in acute medical unit | Yes ( |
| No ( | |
| Covered by colleagues ( | |
| Oxygen assessment service | Yes ( |
| On caseload only ( | |
| Nurse run service ( | |
| For COPD patients only ( | |
| Smoking cessation service | Yes ( |
| Referrals (to hospital service, or smoking cessation service, | |
| Input from charity in clinics ( | |
| Linked to local authority services ( | |
| Advance care planning | Yes ( |
| Part of a clinic ( | |
| Yes (joined by community palliative care team for MDT ( | |
| Other roles | Clinical ethics committee, drugs and therapeutics committee ( |
| Inpatient ward round for inpatients – 3 times a week ( | |
| Care planning conference, (plus mental health, psychiatrist, social worker, medical team OT and patient plus family + plus GP) ( |
Barriers and enablers to delivering integrated care.
| Enabler | ‘Training flexibly means you’re working in slightly different ways to most of your peers, so you have to negotiate your role sometimes you have to be quite thick skinned, you need to be clear of what the value of your role is when it’s slightly different to the traditional model and that’s actually what I’ve had to continue to do as a consultant, so, looking back, that was also quite helpful.’ (I-2) | |
| Enabler | ‘One of the key things about doing flexible training and flexible working is you have to be able to have time to reflect and think and I think that has been a really big thing in terms of being able to innovate.’ (I-8) | |
| Enabler | ||
| Enabler | ||
| Enabler | ||
| Enabler | ||
| Enabler | ||
| Barrier | ‘And I think we should all join that up so that it might be that there isn’t one in every hospital but there’s one in every region and that we then make sure that registrars are freed up regionally to come through these services and that happens for other things like cancer trials to CF. If you haven’t got that going on in your hospital, each year you have your review of training, you make sure you spend a couple of weeks even or a couple of months even as an observer.’ (I-2) | |
| Barrier | ‘It need support through the professional specialist organisations like BTS… also they need government buying.’ (I-11) | |
| Barrier | ‘Also needs support from within acute trusts and CCGs’ (I-11) | |
| Barrier | ‘I don’t think people see it as a potential speciality’ (I-1) | |
| Enabler | ‘… I’d have loved to have a nurse consultant or somebody supporting the community role side of things, so I think a collaborative role with two people is much better than one person trying to straddle lots of different bits of it. I think a physician in crucial to this – there has to be a physician somewhere along the line’ (I-2) | |
| Barrier | ‘I think depending on how many sessions of your clinical time you spend doing this it can deskill you because the more you spend the less time you spend in the hospital and I think a truly integrated clinician is one that will do both’ (I-7) | |
| Barrier | ‘[I] don’t line manage any of them because as a nurse consultant’ | |
| Barrier | ‘Both of the managerial teams [acute/community] want a bit of me, and want me to be their lackey rather than the other person’s lackey’( I-9) | |
| Barrier | ‘Community clinics that we ran were loved by the patients so patient satisfaction was really, really high but it was again it was coming down to cost and I don’t think, we couldn’t demonstrate cost effectiveness within the short time that we had.’ (I-12) | |
| Barrier | ‘The idea that you might look at the cost of the given patient’s care across different providers and somehow make sure whatever rewards come from saving an admission is shared across all providers all of that is extremely challenging and hasn’t been thought through and that’s what really needs to be in place for these things to work properly otherwise you’re constantly coming up against barriers to do with how things are organised’ (I-2) | |
| Barrier | ‘The management which has to be aligned along the lines of patient’s quality of care rather than financial incentives.’ (I-9) | |
| Barrier | ‘We need to do is to prove that these roles are valuable first and there isn’t enough valuation yet to warrant although the commissioners, the other way of doing it is to get the commissioners to believe that this is the way forward because at the end of the day if the commissioners want it somebody has to provide it.’ (I-9) |