| Literature DB >> 33250676 |
Maria Raisa Jessica Ryc Aquino1,2, Ricky Mullis1, Caroline Moore3, Elizabeth Kreit1, Lisa Lim1, Christopher McKevitt4, Bundy Mackintosh5, Jonathan Mant1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Stroke survivors have complex health needs requiring long-term, integrated care. This study aimed to elicit generalists' and specialists' experience of stroke-related interprofessional communication, including perceived barriers and enablers. DESIGN ANDEntities:
Keywords: integrated care; interprofessional communication; primary health care; specialist care; stroke; transition of care
Year: 2020 PMID: 33250676 PMCID: PMC7664307 DOI: 10.5334/ijic.5465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Integr Care Impact factor: 5.120
Group-level characteristics.
| Group ID | Setting; population size | Group composition | Group size (N = 48) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Specialists | Generalists | |||
| Site 01 | City, East of England; population <150,000 | Acute care speech and language therapist = 1 | GP = 1 | 7 |
| Site 02 | City, East of England; population >200,000 | Acute care stroke nurse = 1 | GP = 2 | 7 |
| Site 03 | Town, East of England; population of <200,000 | Acute care occupational therapist = 1 | GP = 1 | 6 |
| Site 04 | City, East Midlands population >300,000 | Acute care occupational therapist = 1 | GP = 2 | 9 |
| Site 05 | City, East Midlands; population <300,000 | Acute care nurse = 1 | GP = 2 | 12 |
| Site 06 | City, East Midlands; population >300,000 | Acute care physiotherapist = 2 | GP = 1 | 7 |
Themes and subthemes.
| Theme | Subtheme |
|---|---|
| Generalists and specialists have overlapping roles but are working in silos | N/A |
| Referral decision-making process as influential to generalist-specialist communication | Categories of services for (re-)referral |
| Criteria for (re-)referral | |
| Variable quality of communication | Barriers to communication |
| Enablers to communication | |
| Improved dialogue between generalist and specialist services | N/A |