| Literature DB >> 33199976 |
Carolyn Steele Gray1,2, Agnes Grudniewicz3, Alana Armas1, James Mold4, Jennifer Im2, Pauline Boeckxstaens5,6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Person-centred integrated care is often at odds with how current health care systems are structured, resulting in slower than expected uptake of the model worldwide. Adopting goal-oriented care, an approach which uses patient priorities, or goals, to drive what kinds of care are appropriate and how care is delivered, may offer a way to improve implementation. DESCRIPTION: This case report presents three international cases of community-based primary health care models in Ottawa (Canada), Vermont (USA) and Flanders (Belgium) that adopted goal-oriented care to stimulate clinical, professional, organizational and system integration. The Rainbow Model of Integrated Care is used to demonstrate how goal-oriented care drove integration at all levels. DISCUSSION: The three cases demonstrate how goal-oriented care has the potential to catalyse integrated care. Exploration of these cases suggests that goal-oriented care can serve to activate formative and normative integration mechanisms; supporting processes that enable integrated care, while providing a framework for a shared philosophy of care. LESSONS LEARNED: By establishing a common vision and philosophy to drive shared processes, goal-oriented care can be a powerful tool to enable integrated care delivery. Offering plenty of opportunities for training in goal-oriented care within and across teams is essential to support this shift. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: case studies; goal-oriented care; integrated care; people-centred goals; people-driven care
Year: 2020 PMID: 33199976 PMCID: PMC7646288 DOI: 10.5334/ijic.5520
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Integr Care Impact factor: 5.120
Mapping goal-oriented care to integrated care.
| Rainbow Model of Integrated Care Dimensions | Definition [ | Goal-Oriented Care Approach |
|---|---|---|
| “The coordination of person-focused care in a single process across time, place and discipline” | GOC operationalizes a person-focused approach in a clinical encounter by calibrating care plans to person-identified goals and priorities, rather than working towards goals related to a specific disease, profession or setting. | |
| “Interprofessional partnerships based on shared competencies, roles, responsibilities and accountability to deliver a comprehensive continuum of care to a defined population” | Goals are often diverse and complex, requiring support from different health and social care professionals. All team members need to understand and agree to focus on common goals (specifically, the patient’s), which can support the transcending of differences between disciplines and lead to clarification of roles and responsibilities in delivery of care. | |
| “Inter-organizational relationships (e.g. contracting, strategic alliances, knowledge networks, mergers) including common governance mechanisms, to deliver comprehensive services to a defined population” | Services required to meet diverse patient goals are likely to come from multiple organizations. Working towards common patient-prioritized goals can help establish a shared language and vision for professionals working together across organizational boundaries. Organizations can look beyond their siloed approaches to establish a shared vision and aligned governance structures. | |
| “A horizontal and vertical integrated system, based on a coherent set of (informal and formal) rules and policies between care providers and external stakeholders for the benefit of people and populations.” | When adopted across a wide region or network, GOC can be used to drive the structure of partnerships to better align with person-centred needs. For example, pay-for-performance systems need to attend to relevant and appropriate outcomes in order to be successful in integrated care [ | |
| “Key support functions and activities (i.e. financial, management and information systems) structured around the primary process of service delivery to coordinate and support accountability and decision-making between organisations and professionals in order to add overall value to the system.” | GOC creates a unifying process of care delivery that can inform the structure of coordinating activities (e.g., referral pathways) and information sharing (e.g., shared electronic medical records). For example, information sharing platforms can highlight person-centred goals, and indicate different providers and organizations that need to be involved in addressing the identified goals. | |
| “The development and maintenance of a common frame of reference (i.e. shared mission, vision, values and culture) between organisations, professional groups and individuals.” | GOC can serve as a common philosophy, and a building block towards shared values of person-centeredness to align disparate professional and organizational groups that need to work together in an integrated model. | |