| Literature DB >> 34174873 |
Justin Avery Aunger1, Ross Millar2, Joanne Greenhalgh3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health systems are facing unprecedented socioeconomic pressures as well as the need to cope with the ongoing strain brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. In response, the reconfiguration of health systems to encourage greater collaboration and integration has been promoted with a variety of collaborative shapes and forms being encouraged and developed. Despite this continued interest, evidence for success of these various arrangements is lacking, with the links between collaboration and improved performance often remaining uncertain. To date, many examinations of collaborations have been undertaken, but use of realist methodology may shed additional light on how and why collaboration works, and whom it benefits.Entities:
Keywords: Collaboration; Context; Healthcare; Implementation; Improvement; Integration; Partnership working; Programme theory; Realist review; Realist synthesis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34174873 PMCID: PMC8235919 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-021-06630-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Simplified depiction of our Middle-Range Theory and the essential roles of trust, confidence, and faith. Adapted from Lasker, Weiss and Miller (2001) & Aunger et al. (2021)
Fig. 2Evolution of literature synthesis by phase of review [18, 26]
Fig. 3Depiction of phases and aims of this realist project, where this is phase 3 [18, 26]. Modified from Westhorp [29]
Fig. 4PRISMA diagram of search results
Characteristics of included literature
| Study | Country | Partnership type | Sector | Methods and sample |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adedoyin et al. | USA | Merger | Social work programmes | Journaling to report personal experiences and retrospective descriptions of the merger process |
| Allen et al. (2016) | England | Joint commissioning | Healthcare | Case study with 42 interviews & documentary analysis |
| Ball et al. | Scotland | Community health partnership/integrated care | Health and social care | More than 30 interviews with professionals, public, and voluntary sector; use of Partnership Assessment Tool [ |
| Care Quality Commission (2017) | England | Sustainability Transformation Partnership/Accountable Care Organisation | Health and social care | Evaluation, based on inspection reports based on visits to 25 independent sector adult social care providers and a four-day visit to the organisation |
| Cereste, Doherty and Travers, (2003) | UK | Merger | Hospitals and mental health/community trusts | Focus group, and questionnaire answered by 457 trusts (mostly chief executives, finance directors, etc.) |
| Community Network (2020d) | England | Provider alliance/ Integrated care | Health and social care | Summary report from a wider project – case studies (methods unknown) |
| Community Network (2020e) | England | Provider alliance/ Integrated care | Health and social care | Summary report from a wider project – case studies (methods unknown) |
| Community Network (2020b) | England | Provider alliance/ Integrated care | Health and social care | Summary report from a wider project – case studies (methods unknown) |
| Community Network (2020a) | England | Provider alliance/ Integrated care | Health and social care | Summary report from a wider project – case studies (methods unknown) |
| Community Network (2020c) | England | Provider alliance/ Integrated care | Health and social care | Summary report from a wider project – case studies (methods unknown) |
| Cortvriend (2004) | England | Primary care trust | Acute care, primary care | Focus groups, with 31 participants taking part across five such groups, each containing 4–8 participants |
| Crump and Edwards (2014) | England | Provider chains | Acute care | Interviews (non-NHS, |
| Dickinson and Glasby (2013) | England | Integrated care | Health and social care | Five case study sites, using documentary analysis, interviews, and focus groups. |
| Dickinson, Peck and Davidson (2007) | England | Merger | Health and social care | Case study, 23 semi-structured interviews with range of people, from service users to CEOs |
| Erens et al. | England | Integrated care | Health and social care | Case studies of 25 Integrated Care Pioneers, involving documentary analysis, qualitative interviews, and surveys |
| Findlay (2019) | Scotland | Health boards | Health and social care | Literature, documentary analysis, non-participant observation, and semi-structured interviews with 44 participants |
| Forbes, Evans and Scott (2010) | England and Scotland | Integrated care | Health and social care | Four case studies, two in England and two in Scotland; semi-structured interviews were used ( |
| Foundation Trust Network (2014) | England | Buddying | Acute care | Twelve trusts as case studies, involved in buddying; using surveys, desk research, structured interviews and documentary analysis |
| Fowler Davis, Hinde and Ariss (2020) | England | NHS Vanguards | Health and social care | Service evaluation with embedded team; qualitative in-depth interviews |
| Fulop et al. | England | Merger | Health and social care | Nine trusts (cross-sectional) and four trusts (case studies); using in-depth interviews and documentary analysis |
| Gannon-Leary, Baines and Wilson (2006) | England | Partnerships (mixed) | Health and social care and voluntary sector | Evaluation and literature review; narrative ‘experiential’ methodology |
| Gulliver (1999) | England | Joint commissioning, mental health | Health and social care | Evaluation; narrative ‘experiential’ methodology |
| Gulliver, Peck and Towell (2001) | England | Joint commissioning, mental health | Health and social care | Evaluation of a mental health service; utilising interviews with service users & staff, postal surveys, focus groups, observations, and documentary analyses |
| Hearld, Alexander and Shi, (2015) | USA | Alliances | Health and social care | Case study of 16 alliances; quantitative data from surveys and qualitative interviews |
| Henderson et al. (2020) | USA | Primary care network | Health and social care | Evaluations of six primary care clinics and community-based organisations; qualitative methods comprising 54 interviews and 10 focus groups, with review of 80 documents |
| Idel (2003) | Israel | Merger | Acute care | Prospective study with quantitative methods; using a questionnaire; |
| Jones (2020) | England | Primary care network | Primary care | Report of experiences; narrative ‘experiential’ methodology |
| Kershaw et al. (2018) | England | Sustainability and Transformation Partnership | Health and social care | Case study of five STPs in London; phase 1 (small scale interviews with leaders), phase 2 (26 semi-structured interviews with leaders and stakeholders) and groups discussions. |
| Lalani et al.(2018) | England | Quality improvement collaborative | Acute care | Evaluation with researcher-in-residence model, based on two sites, comprising 15 semi-structured interviews |
| Leach et al. (2019) | England | Buddying | Health and social care | Evaluation; using quantitative performance data and mixed methods staff survey |
| Lewis (2005) | Australia | Primary care partnership | Primary care | Case study of two PCPs; using a network research methodology including both surveys and interviews with 37 people |
| Lim (2014) | UK | Merger | Health and social care | Quantitative analysis of merger data from nine hospitals relating to staff job satisfaction |
| Maniatopoulos et al. (2020) | UK | Vanguards (eleven different cases) | Health and social care | Comparative case studies including 66 semi-structured qualitative interviews across nine vanguards, as well as documentary analysis of included |
| Mervyn, Amoo and Malby (2019) | England | Network | Health and social care | Exploratory case study employing 12 initial semi-structured interviews, a literature review, and then an additional 21 interviews with another sample |
| Murray, D’Aunno and Lewis (2018) | USA | Accountable care organisation | Health and social care | Longitudinal case studies from 2012 to 2017 with two ACOs, including 115 semi-structured interviews and observational data based on 7 site visits |
| Naylor, Alderwick and Honeyman (2015) | England | Integrated care | Health and social care | Five case study sites with acute hospital providers that have moved towards integrated care, utilising 39 in-depth interviews and site visits |
| NHS Employers (2017) | England | Vanguards | Health and social care | In-depth case studies on three vanguards including semi-structured interviews ( |
| NHS Providers (2019) | England | Integrated care | Health and social care | A briefing by a policy organisation that uses interviews (unknown number) |
| NHS Providers (2018) | England | Integrated care | Health and social care | Case studies from three health and social care partnerships in England, in the format of a series of organisational reports |
| NHS Providers and NHS Clinical Commissioners (2018) | England | Joint commissioning | Health and social care | Policy report drawing on a literature review and in-depth semi-structured interviews with clinical commissioning ( |
| Peck, Towell and Gulliver (2001) | England | Joint commissioning | Health and social care | Case study of a combined Trust; using annual semi-structured interviews with managers, postal surveys with ( |
| Pickup (2004) | England | Integrated care/joint commissioning, mental health | Adult services | Case study in the format of an ‘experiential report’ |
| Round et al. (2018) | England | Integrated care | Primary, acute, community, mental health and social care | Programme evaluation design; using documentary analysis, 31 stakeholder semi-structured interviews, focus groups, and observational data |
| Shaw (2002) | England | Mergers | Health and social care, integrated Trust | Case study of merger of two trusts; using qualitative methods and semi-structured interviews with 42 people. Documentary analysis was also used |
| Smith et al. (2020) | England | Primary care networks | Primary care | Qualitative cross-comparative case study across four sites using: rapid evidence assessment, a workshop with academics and policy experts, interviews with stakeholders, observations, survey, documentary analysis |
| Southby and Gamsu (2018) | England | Integrated care, primary care networks | Primary care and voluntary and community sectors | Case study design comprising four cases, each with a GP and VCS organisation; using 18 semi-structured interviews with GPs, practice managers, practice nurses, and senior managers, and a focus group of 14 participants |
| Southwark and Lambeth Integrated Care (2016) | England | Integrated care | Health and social care | Report regarding organisational experience of an integrated care programme; using evaluative as well as anecdotal evidence |
| Starling (2018) | England | Vanguards | Health and social care | Case studies, interviewing 45 middle-to-senior clinical and non-clinical leaders and evaluators across eight vanguard sites |
| Steininger et al. (2016) | Austria | Hospital merger | Acute care | Qualitative case study of the merge of IT systems; involving interviews with 40 stakeholders |
| The King’s Fund (2005) | England | Joint commissioning | Community care | Report as part of an evaluation; observation and interviews were used (unclear quantities) |
| Timmins (2019) | England | Integrated care | Health and social care | Analysis of leaders’ experiences with integrated care and collaboration in a report format; based on interviews with 16 chairs and leads |
Mechanisms present in prior phase of realist synthesis (left) vs. refined theory (right), an explanation of these mechanisms, and which outcome these mechanisms typically produce
| Initial mechanisms | Refined mechanisms and their type | Explanation | Most frequent outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Task achievement and performance | Effectiveness through collaboration: enabling innovation, reduced duplication of effort, sharing of best practices, increased access to resource, reduced gaps in services, increased influence over others | The ‘ultimate outcomes’ that usually underlie actual improvements to key metrics of organisational performance | n/a |
| Synergy and collaborative inertia | Changes towards collaborative behaviour from competitive behaviour (behaviour) | A move from competitive organisational behaviours to collaborative ones | Collaborative effectiveness |
| n/a | Risk threshold (cognitive process) | How much risk an organisation is willing to take on with a collaborator | Collaborative behaviour |
| Faith | Faith (cognitive process) | A belief in the collaborative endeavour as a positive force and therefore a motivation to work on its goals | Collaborative behaviour |
| Perception of progress | Perception of progress (mindset) | Whether actors perceive advancement towards the goals of the collaboration | Faith |
| Conflict | Conflict (mindset) | The perception by organisational actors that they are in opposition to collaborators in some way | Trust |
| Approach to conflict resolution and accountability (cognitive processes) | Processes and attitudes in place that lessen the severity of conflict | Conflict | |
| Trust | Trust (cognitive process) | Risk threshold | |
| Confidence | Confidence (cognitive process) | A belief that a collaborator will behave collaboratively due to contractual or other obligation | Risk threshold |
| Initial trust | Initial trust (cognitive process) | Trust that manifests as a result of pre-existing contextual factors | Trust |
| Power | Whether one organisation has more influence on proceedings than another | Trust | |
| Leadership | The set of behaviours and attitudes that key organisational leaders possess | Trust | |
| Cultural integration | Cultural assimilation (cognitive process) | How well actors between organisations are aligning in terms of attitudes and behaviours | Trust |
| Interpersonal communication/ coordination | Interpersonal communication & information sharing (behaviour) | The behaviour of communicating and sharing information | Trust |
| Perception of task complexity | Perception of task complexity/initial faith (cognitive process) | How complex actors perceive the collaborative endeavour to be | Faith |
| Clarity and sharedness of vision (cognitive process) | How well-defined and to what extent the vision between partners is agreed-upon | Trust | |
| Perceived legitimacy of collaboration (cognitive process) | How actors perceive the collaboration in terms of its authenticity | Initial faith |
Fig. 5Example of how contextual elements and mechanisms may operate over time to drive a voluntary-type partnership into collaborative synergy. The lines represent how levels of trust and faith may change independently over time in response to the various numbered events
Fig. 6Refined programme theory diagram based on new and refined CMOCs and demi-regularities identified in this phase of the synthesis. Contextual factors are represented by green boxes
Fig. 7Depiction of ‘web of causality’ formed by CMOC chains of how and why healthcare collaborations work. Green and blue elements relate to Collaborative Functioning