| Literature DB >> 34220395 |
Tania Carron1, Cloe Rawlinson1, Chantal Arditi1, Christine Cohidon1, Quan Nha Hong2, Pierre Pluye2, Ingrid Gilles1, Isabelle Peytremann-Bridevaux1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Interprofessional collaboration (IPC) is increasingly used but diversely implemented in primary care. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of IPC in primary care settings.Entities:
Keywords: collaboration; effectiveness; interprofessional; overview; primary care; review
Year: 2021 PMID: 34220395 PMCID: PMC8231476 DOI: 10.5334/ijic.5588
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Integr Care Impact factor: 5.120
Categorization of patient outcomesa.
| CATEGORIES OF PATIENT OUTCOMES | EXAMPLES OF INCLUDED OUTCOMES |
|---|---|
| Clinical outcomes | Depression/anxiety scale, HbA1c level, blood pressure, lipids, other clinical outcomes, symptomatology, recovery, remission, mortality, morbidity, survival |
| Medication outcomes | Medication use, medication adherence, compliance with medication, number of prescribed drugs |
| Healthcare use | Hospital admissions, hospital utilization, medical service use, emergency department visits, length of stay, usage, readmission rate, time to readmission |
| Processes of care | Provision of recommended tests and preventive services, adherence to recommended care guidelines (vaccination, monitoring), improved accessibility, reduced waiting times, treatment adequacy, appropriate medications |
| QoL, functioning, other PROMs | Patient quality of life, physical/emotional/and social functioning, patient health behaviors, health practices (lifestyle, self-care), self-perceived health, QALY |
| Patient satisfaction | Patient satisfaction, attitudes and perceptions of care |
a HbA1c: Haemoglobin bA1c; PROMs: Patient-Reported Outcome Measures; QALY: Quality-Adjusted Life Years; QoL: Quality of Life.
Results from included reviews for patient outcomes (n = 34).
| TYPE OF COLLABORATION | AUTHORS, YEAR | META-ANALYSIS | CLINICAL OUTCOMES | MEDICATION OUTCOMES | HEALTHCARE USE | PROCESS OF CARE | QOL, FUNCTIONING, OTHER PROMS | PATIENT SATISFACTION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barrett, 2007 [ | + | + | + | + | ||||
| DeLoach, 2018 [ | + | |||||||
| Gougeon, 2017 [ | ? | ? | + | + | ||||
| Martin, 2010 [ | ? | ? | ? | + | ||||
| Proia, 2014 [ | + | + | + | + | ||||
| Schepman, 2015 [ | ? | ? | ? | |||||
| Trivedi, 2013 [ | ? | ? | + | ? | + | |||
| Wranik, 2019 [ | ? | ? | + | + | ? | |||
| Norful, 2017 [ | ? | + | ? | |||||
| Carmont, 2017 [ | + | ? | ||||||
| Foy, 2010 [ | √ | + | ||||||
| Mitchell, 2002 [ | ? | ? | + | ? | + | |||
| Mitchell, 2015 [ | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ||
| Smith, 2017 [ | √ | ? | + | ? | ? | ? | ? | |
| Hazen, 2017 [ | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||
| Kwint, 2013 [ | ? | 0 | ? | 0 | ||||
| Health Quality Ontario, 2009 [ | √ | + | ||||||
| Archer, 2012 [ | √ | + | + | + | + | |||
| Bower, 2006 [ | √ | + | + | |||||
| Butler, 2008 [ | + | |||||||
| Coventry, 2014 [ | √ | + | + | |||||
| Craven, 2006 [ | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ||
| Dham, 2017 [ | ? | + | + | ? | ? | |||
| Fuller, 2011 a [ | + | + | ||||||
| Gilbody, 2006 [ | √ | + | ||||||
| Gunn, 2006 [ | + | |||||||
| Huang, 2013 [ | √ | + | + | |||||
| Muntingh, 2016 [ | √ | + | ||||||
| Panagioti, 2016 [ | √ | + | ||||||
| Sighinolfi, 2014 [ | √ | + | ||||||
| Thota, 2012 [ | √ | + | + | + | + | |||
| van Steenbergen-Weijenburg, 2010 [ | + | + | ||||||
| Davies, 2011 [ | ? | ? | ||||||
| Martin-Misener, 2012 [ | + | + | ||||||
+ Improvement: a review reports improvements in all outcomes from a category of outcomes (e.g. standardized mean difference, statistical significant difference before/after the intervention or versus a control group).
? Mixed results: a review reports mixed findings (e.g. improvement of one outcome but no change or worsening effect in another) between primary studies reporting the same outcome or between different outcomes of a given category.
0 No change: a review reports no change in the outcomes from a category of outcomes.
√ The review included a meta-analysis.