| Literature DB >> 32565760 |
Audra de Witt1,2, Veronica Matthews3, Ross Bailie3, Gail Garvey1, Patricia C Valery1,2, Jon Adams4, Jennifer H Martin5,6, Frances C Cunningham1.
Abstract
AIM: To explore health professionals' perspectives on communication, continuity and between-service coordination for improving cancer care for Indigenous people in Queensland.Entities:
Keywords: Indigenous people; cancer care coordination; collaboration; communication; integrated care; primary health care
Year: 2020 PMID: 32565760 PMCID: PMC7292184 DOI: 10.5334/ijic.5456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Integr Care Impact factor: 5.120
Participant characteristics.
| Total number of participants in settings | Self-identified Indigenous participants | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| PHC | Tertiary | ||
| Male | 6 | 3 | |
| Female | 11 | 6 | |
| Receptionist/admin officer | 1 | 1 | |
| Aboriginal Health Workers/Professionals | 2 | 2 | |
| Aboriginal Liaison Officer | 2 | 2 | |
| Allied Health Coordinator | 1 | 1 | |
| Maternal and Child Health Manager | 1 | 1 | |
| Enrolled Nurse | 2 | 1 | |
| Registered Nurse | 4 | 1 | 3* |
| Nutritionist | 1 | – | |
| Social Worker | 1 | – | |
| General Practitioner | 6 | – | |
| Medical Oncologist | 1 | – | |
| Radiation Oncologist | 2 | – | |
| Hematologist | 1 | – | |
| Urban area | 1 | 1 | |
| Inner regional | 1 | ||
| Outer regional | 3 | ||
| Remote area | 1 | ||
Key: * denotes PHC setting.
Enablers, barriers and strategies for improvement in the continuity and coordination of care within and between the PHC and cancer treating tertiary hospital as identified by study participants, displayed in IPCHS categories.
| WHO IPCHS identified primary drivers of continuity and coordination of care | Enablers | Barriers | Strategies for improving continuity and coordination of care |
|---|---|---|---|
Continued relationships and trust Patient follow-up and provision of holistic care General practitioner (GP) as central point | Staff workload resulting in minimum time for patients (hospital setting) Limited staff knowledge to provide adequate care | ||
Proactive approach to patients care Patient navigator Patient support to access services | Systems and processes resulting in barriers to care e.g. organisation protocols resulting in a lot of paperwork and time delays) | ||
Flexible care delivery (e.g. telehealth) ‘Drop-in’ clinics Extension of clinic hours (PHC) Longer GP/specialist patient consultations Visiting specialists/allied health professionals at PHC setting | Rigid hospital appointment schedules/times Transport and parking costs (hospital setting) Short hospital consultation times with specialists Lengthy waiting times before seeing specialist (hospital setting) | ||
Timely communication and information exchange Use of technology | Limited communication & coordination/teamwork within hospital Delayed communication and information exchange on patient treatment/condition Ineffective administrative/system processes (such as some PHC having difficulty accessing paperwork) | ||
Collaborative partnerships, teamwork and good relationships within and external to the organisation Care management plans | Working in silos Lack of clarity between PHC and hospital staff on who’s providing the follow-up care Lack of streamlined services and system processes | ||
Study participants recommended strategies on improving communication between the treating hospital and PHC services.
| Themes | Participants recommendations | Sample Hospital participant quotes | Sample PHC participant quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| “It’s about timeliness of the delivery of information and I do think that often there’s an unacceptable delay between the patient’s diagnosis and the GP getting the information, because the patients have very commonly been back to see their GP before the GP has received a letter from us.” (Hospital 6, Non-Indigenous specialist) | “So, maybe if it’s consented (to share patient’s hospital records) when they (patients’) first go in… then after that’s fine. So, if paperwork has come, then they can just send it straight through… if the consent is given for the doctor to share the paperwork while our patient is still in hospital, then that might be a good thing too… because then too once again… if a doctors have got a heads up about what’s happening and what needs to be done when the patient comes out, and then they can start to organise that before they come out.” (PHC 8, Indigenous EEN) | ||
| “I know at one point there we were doing a lot of community engagement so we were able to actually leave the hospital and go and visit organisations and things, but we kind of cut back on that community engagement. I suppose if we returned to that level of community engagement again that would probably help.” (Hospital 8, Indigenous ALO) | (Regarding discharge summary paperwork) “there’s actually someone (named on discharge summary) that can be contacted … so, for instance I may not know who the registrar is, and within Queensland Health they will change during a year, so for there to be a named individual on the discharge summary that says, ‘if you’ve got any questions please phone blah blah blah, and here is my mobile number’, so that there’s a named point of contact.” (PHC 3, Non-Indigenous care coordinator RN) | ||
| “Again, it will come down to as long as we’ve got the right GP and that the patient is going back there. I think if we see a patient and we get them through the process and treat them, we make sure that we explain to them as best we can what the recovery is going to be, we do a follow-up phone call which I do… and then send those letters to the GP. I think that’s pretty good communication and always know or trusting that a Doctor would call if they need to.” (Hospital 5, Non-Indigenous RN) | “It’s just… I spose ongoing communication. What I’d like to see is more information about patients who are in the hospital… so we know who is in the hospital. Whether they’re in there for… say they got sick at home and they’re now in having treatment at palliative care. I’d like to know about all our patients… all Aboriginal patients that may be in palliative care. I’d like to know as soon as… not wait two weeks down the track.” (PHC 9, Non-Indigenous social worker) | ||
| “We need to be emailing these letters and they need to be going electronically to GP’s, but at an administrative level.., I think that we need to improve those communication pathways, and it needs to be electronic.. but then, there’s still this delay in the dictation process.” (Hospital 6, Non-Indigenous specialist) | “Oh, it’s just I suppose it’s just the feedback. When they’ve seen the specialist you need to have that feedback from the specialist. It’s just this paperwork that you need to chase up all the time. Especially when they get into those big hospitals.” (PHC 13, Non- Indigenous EEN) | ||
Figure 1Drivers of continuity and care coordination from this study added to the implementation guide of the WHO Framework of Integrated People-Centred Health Services [26].