| Literature DB >> 30045721 |
Selena O'Connell1, Vera J C Mc Carthy2, Eileen Savage2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In a number of countries, frameworks have been developed to improve self-management support (SMS) in order to reduce the impact of chronic disease. The frameworks potentially provide direction for system-wide change in the provision of SMS by healthcare systems. Although policy formulation sets a foundation for health service reform, little is currently known about the processes which underpin SMS framework development as well as the respective implementation and evaluation plans.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic disease; Document analysis; Health policy analysis; Self-management support
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30045721 PMCID: PMC6060470 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3387-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Categories of information for analysis
| Category | Descriptor | Examples/Application |
|---|---|---|
| Context | Factors which can influence policy development including past provision of SMS for chronic disease | Healthcare structures and governance, health service reform agenda, burden of chronic disease, demographic and prevalence trends of chronic disease, e-health trends, information on previous delivery of SMS |
| Content | Scope of the framework, defining features of SMS espoused, goal statements, policy statements of action | Chronic diseases targeted and scope of population for intervention; components of SMS definition; stated goal including intended effect and outcomes; SMS priorities or courses of action |
| Actors | Stakeholders involved in policy making | Government representatives, clinicians, health service managers, people with chronic disease, voluntary sector representatives and community and advocacy groups. |
| Processes | How information and actors interests are incorporated in policy formation; proposed process of implementation and evaluation | Evidence used and processes of stakeholder involvement such as consultation, involvement in workshops and surveys, member of working group; implementation plans, associated timelines, facilitation processes; evaluation strategies and feedback process. |
Fig. 1Document identification, screening and selection
Chronic conditions addressed by frameworks
| Framework | CVD | Diabetes | Respiratory | Renal | Musculoskeletal | Mental health | Cancers | Additional Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| QLD | X | X | X | X | X | |||
| SL | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | Multimorbidity addressed. |
| WL | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | Multimorbidity addressed. |
| WA | X | X | X | X | X | Applicable to other conditions. | ||
| MB | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | |
| TAS | X | X | X | X | X | X | Additional conditions listed. | |
| NT | X | X | X | X | X | X | Applicable to other conditions. | |
| IRL | X | X | X | Multimorbidity addressed. |
Note: conditions of focus were not explicit in SL, WL and MB
Commonly prioritised courses of action to support self-management across frameworks
| Patient Education Programmes | Training for HCPs | Awareness raising | Accessibility of SMS | Technology to support SMS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| QLD | Provide evidence based programmes | Provide education and training | Social marketing campaign | Provide suitable SMS | Consumer personal health record |
| WL | Generic and disease specific | Skills training | Provider awareness of programmes | SM information in various formats, signposting | Technology for reminders, self-monitoring, follow-up |
| WA | Coordinated SMS programmes and services | Curricula, professional development, mentoring | Marketing strategy, framework endorsement | Easy referral pathways, flexible delivery of services | Website for all stakeholders |
| MB | Telecare programme prioritised | – | Provider awareness of programmes | Research suitability for different groups | Online health portal |
| TAS | Make programs available | A range of training options, evidence-based practice | Provider awareness of programmes | Provide range of flexible resources | Range of resources including online |
| NT | Build capacity | Training and access to evidence-based practice | Framework endorsement | Clear referral pathways, SM information through various mediums | Electronic client record, SMS through online and other media |
| IRL | Map and increase provision of generic and disease specific | Curricula, professional development | SMS communication plan | Resources to account for health literacy, signposting | IT systems to support delivery, electronic patient record |
Note: SL not included as it did not explicitly prioritise actions for implementation
Policy actors and processes for each frameworka
| Framework | Actors | Development processes | Implementation Plans | Evaluation Plans |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QLD | Members of strategy team and alliance, government, non-governmental organisations, professional bodies, private sector, consumer advocacy groups, HCPs universities and national and international ‘experts’ | Consultation through forums, electronic questionnaire, feedback on drafts, meetings with key stakeholders. Evidence and existing frameworks. | Actions with timelines not reported. Proposed to be dynamic and flexible. | Plan/outcomes not detailed. Contains recommendations. |
| SL | Representatives from health and chronic disease organisations. | Working group and consultation on draft strategy. | Actions with timelines not reported. Processes of funding outlined. | Plan/outcomes not detailed. Contains recommendations. |
| WL | Not reported. | Not reported. | Actions with timelines not reported. Information on governance, infrastructure, incentives. | Plan/outcomes not detailed. Contains recommendations. |
| WA | Chronic disease consumers, carers, managers, policy developers, service providers, NGOs, researchers, self-management educators. | Consultation through an electronic qualitative survey, workshops with Strategy Review Group and feedback on draft. | Actions reported with timelines. Discussion of infrastructure, governance and funding. | Plan with timelines and actors responsible for leading evaluation. |
| MB | Not reported. | Guided by evidence, international and local. | Actions with timelines reported. Leading organisation and mechanisms of implementation identified. | Plan/outcomes not detailed. Contains recommendations |
| TAS | Reference group (HCPs and programme managers) and Chronic Conditions Clinical Network. | Consultation to identify priority areas. | Actions with timelines not reported. Dynamic process, encourage uptake of resources by services and providers. | Plan/outcomes not detailed. Contains recommendations |
| NT | HCPs providing SMS, government, non-government and Aboriginal community controlled health service providers, HCPs and consumer groups. | Developed by working group. Used focus groups (urban and remote). Consultation on draft, evidence of experience and frameworks from other areas. | Actions reported with timelines. | Plan reported with performance measures for actions and timelines. |
| IRL | Health division and programme managers/ coordinators and researcher, HCPs, patient and chronic disease-specific organisations, people with chronic diseases, government, health service and university representation. | Working group and consultation on draft through focus groups, interviews. Evidence used from literature, international policy documents, national survey and forum for patient consultation. | Actions reported with timelines and actors responsible. Plans for governance, infrastructure and resourcing. | Early process measures detailed. Contains further recommendations. |
aSee Additional file 2 for further detail