| Literature DB >> 29925357 |
Gro Berntsen1,2, Audhild Høyem3, Idar Lettrem4, Cornelia Ruland3, Markus Rumpsfeld5,6, Deede Gammon7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Person-Centered Integrated Care (PC-IC) is believed to improve outcomes and experience for persons with multiple long-term and complex conditions. No broad consensus exists regarding how to capture the patient-experienced quality of PC-IC. Most PC-IC evaluation tools focus on care events or care in general. Building on others' and our previous work, we outlined a 4-stage goal-oriented PC-IC process ideal: 1) Personalized goal setting 2) Care planning aligned with goals 3) Care delivery according to plan, and 4) Evaluation of goal attainment. We aimed to explore, apply, refine and operationalize this quality of care framework.Entities:
Keywords: Care process; Continuity of care; Delivery of healthcare; Evaluation research; Goal attainment; Health service research; Integrated care; Long-term conditions; Multimorbidity; Person-centered care
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29925357 PMCID: PMC6011266 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3246-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1An overview of the stages of the research process included in this paper
Background characteristics and care complexity measures for 19 informants, Norway, 2011–2013
| Informant background | N | N | N |
| Gender | 8 males | 11 female | |
| Employment status | 7 employed | 7 unemployed | 1 child/4 pensioners |
| Living arrangements | 3 alone | 16 with spouse/children | |
| Home municipality | 14 rural | 5 urban | |
| Care complexity | Mean | Median | Range |
| # of diagnoses treated per year | 5 | 4 | (2–10) |
| # different health services per year | 6 | 5 | (2–12) |
| # of general practice visits per year | 10 | 7 | (1–36) |
| # of health service visits per year | 28 | 21 | (5–132) |
| # of inpatient days per year | 16 | 4 | (0–130) |
Characterization of the four stages of the Person-Centered Integrated Care (PC-IC) cyclical process for evaluation of individual Patient Pathways (iPP)
| Description of ideal care | Key questions | Supporting literature |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Goals | ||
| The unit of observation is the long-term iPP. | How do persons express “What matters to them?” | • Goal-oriented care [ |
| 2. The care plan | ||
| The care plan is based on a multidisciplinary review of the goals from step 1. The first step is to identify skills and competencies needed to achieve these goals. There are no organizational limits regarding whom to include in the iPP plan. | Was a written or verbal care plan described in the EHR, or by the patient? | • Shared decision making [ |
| 3. Care delivery | ||
| Care delivery builds on the care plan from step 2. The delivery of care is a system property, not a feature of individual professionals. The care system should identify the resources necessary to reach overarching goals irrespective of organizational boundaries and responsibilities. | • Was the care plan operationalized to show where, when and who would provide their care? | • Delivery system design [ |
| 4. Goal attainment | ||
| The iPP success is measured by the degree of goal attainment of goals set in step 1. | • Did they plan and assess goal attainment? | • Health and Functional outcomes [ |
Descriptions of ideal care, key questions, and literature underpinnings to support a consistent evaluation of care across observers and informants