Literature DB >> 31268496

Making health care responsive to the needs of older people.

Jackie Bridges1, Catherine Pope1, Jeffrey Braithwaite2.   

Abstract

This commentary highlights the importance of health system responsiveness to older people living with complex health needs. Age-related changes and associated morbidity can present barriers to identifying an individual's health needs, expectations, values and preferences, and so sufficient time, skill and resource is required to inform the development of a tailored plan for each individual. A focus on responsiveness moves thinking beyond the responsibilities of the individual clinician in the single encounter, and allows us to identify elements of the wider system that may constrain how well the clinician is able to respond. Setting the goal of responsive health care requires us to assess the suitability of wider health system features and processes for meeting the diverse needs of individual people throughout their journey, and the extent to which the system can adapt dynamically as needs change. Standardised approaches to care prescribed across organisations (such as time-based targets or routinised approaches to inpatient nursing care) are likely to result in low responsiveness as individual complexity grows, disadvantaging patients with needs that do not fit the prescribed approach. Responsiveness is high when individual practitioners and clinical teams have the resources, decentralised authority, flexibility and autonomy to provide the care required. Building a more responsive health system requires a greater understanding of how these conditions can be achieved.
© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  health system responsiveness; healthcare improvement; older people; patient involvement; shared decision making

Year:  2019        PMID: 31268496     DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afz085

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Age Ageing        ISSN: 0002-0729            Impact factor:   10.668


  5 in total

1.  Can person-centred care for people living with dementia be delivered in the acute care setting?

Authors:  Rebecca A Abbott; Debbie Cheeseman; Anthony Hemsley; Jo Thompson Coon
Journal:  Age Ageing       Date:  2021-06-28       Impact factor: 10.668

Review 2.  Health system responsiveness: a systematic evidence mapping review of the global literature.

Authors:  Gadija Khan; Nancy Kagwanja; Eleanor Whyle; Lucy Gilson; Sassy Molyneux; Nikki Schaay; Benjamin Tsofa; Edwine Barasa; Jill Olivier
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2021-05-01

3.  Social network participation towards enactment of self-care in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A qualitative meta-ethnography.

Authors:  Lindsay Welch; Euan Sadler; Anthony Austin; Anne Rogers
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2021-08-25       Impact factor: 3.377

4.  Unmet Needs of Healthcare Services and Associated Factors among a Cohort of Ghanaian Adults: A Nationally Stratified Cross-Sectional Study Design.

Authors:  Phaedra Yamson; John Tetteh; Daniel DeGraft-Amoah; Henry Quansah; George Mensah; Richard Biritwum; Alfred Edwin Yawson
Journal:  Inquiry       Date:  2021 Jan-Dec       Impact factor: 1.730

5.  "What Bothers Me Most Is the Disparity between the Choices that People Have or Don't Have": A Qualitative Study on the Health Systems Responsiveness to Implementing the Assisted Decision-Making (Capacity) Act in Ireland.

Authors:  Éidín Ní Shé; Deirdre O'Donnell; Sarah Donnelly; Carmel Davies; Francesco Fattori; Thilo Kroll
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-05-09       Impact factor: 3.390

  5 in total

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