| Literature DB >> 34824566 |
Jacqueline Cumming1, Lesley Middleton2, Pushkar Silwal3, Tim Tenbensel4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Ten years ago, progress towards integrated care in Aotearoa New Zealand was characterised as slow. Since then, there has been a patchwork of practices occurring under the broad umbrella of integrated care. These include: collective planning approaches (i.e., alliancing), agreed pathways of care, chronic care management initiatives, shared patient information systems, co-located centres and indigenous models of holistic care (e.g., Whānau Ora). DESCRIPTION: Although integrated care is often mentioned in national policy documents, implementation has been left to regional and local decision making, and very few initiatives have spread beyond their initial locations. DISCUSSION: System incentives that preserve organisational "sovereignty" and path-dependent funding have slowed progress towards more integrated care in some areas. There is some evidence about specific initiatives and their impact, but it is difficult to discern significant trends and commonalities around the country.Entities:
Keywords: New Zealand; equity; integrated care; primary health care
Year: 2021 PMID: 34824566 PMCID: PMC8588901 DOI: 10.5334/ijic.5679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Integr Care Impact factor: 5.120
Local Integrated Care Initiatives.
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| CANTERBURY | GREATER AUCKLAND | MID-CENTRAL | NATIONAL HAUORA COALITION | MIDLANDS | |
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| Evolved into a wider Canterbury System change management and leadership programme under a ‘one system, one budget’ message developing new models of integrated working and new forms of contracting to support this. After several large earthquakes (2010/11), changes accelerated to relieve the immediate strain on the health service [ | Evolved into a Localities initiatives in one DHB (Counties Manukau) which started with ambitious budget-holding proposals which were then abandoned due to lack of agreement between parties [ | Evolved into a diversity of local initiatives centred around different partnerships, and the building of Integrated Family Health Centres | Evolved into many initiatives adopting a whānau ora model of care including Mana Tū. As a result of a codesign process for Māori living with complex long-term conditions Mana Tū started with a focus on those with type 2 diabetes | Evolved into a Health Care Home Initiative modelled on the United States Medical Home model developed by Group Health Cooperative (tailored to the New Zealand context) [ |
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| Multi-level | Attempted multi-level | Attempted complex multi-level system changes but reverted to making small scale local progress on; | Started as case management support within wider interest in indigenous models of care. Initial emphasis on: | Changes only at the level of the PC system involving: |
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| Multiple evaluations and reviews highlighting the importance of leadership enablers including staff engagement, continuous quality improvement as well as technology able to drive a “one system one budget” approach [ | Evaluation of what encouraged general practices to successfully implement more proactive care highlighted the importance of team approaches within practices which were prepared to change their organisational processes to support nurses to confidently take on new responsibilities for those with long-term conditions [ | Evaluation found professionals ranked their perception of care coordination highly while patients rated their experience less highly. Success largely hinged on the enthusiasm of a small pool of frontline workers (champions) and their initial buy-into the idea of integrated care and a patient-centred approach(22] | Early assessments suggested user experiences were shaped by the way the Mana Tū programme was co-designed with whānau (patients and their families) to incorporate the experience of Māori experiencing long-term conditions. The philosophy of the Mana Tū programme is to support whānau to ‘mana tū’ (i.e., ‘to stand with authority’) [ | Multiple evaluations highlighting the early energy and focus given to actions linked to improved business efficiency and sustainability of general practice. Staff generally rated the model higher than the traditional model of general practice [ |
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| Care outcomes limited to small studies. For example; integrated falls prevention strategies contributed to a reduction in harm from falls in the elderly population [ | No specific data | No specific data | Early results found an average HbA1c decrease of 5mmol/mol for participants 3 months into the programme [ | Population health targets (e.g. immunisations, smoking) were met. Patient portal use, and accessibility of appointments improved [ |
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| Findings related to bending the demand curve, “slowing – but not reversing – growth”. Results included: lower acute medical admission rates; lower acute readmission rates; shorter average length of stay; lower emergency department attendances [ | An evaluation found no evidence of change that could be confidently attributed back to the Localities initiative from tracking secondary care demand across the Auckland region [ | Analysis of routine date revealed that the desired 30% reduction in ASH rates were not realised. Data for ED presentations revealed a flat or slightly upwards trend [ | No specific data | Early findings in one region have reported a significantly lower rate of ASHs (20% fewer) and a significantly lower rate of ED presentations (14% decrease) [ |
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| Compared with the rest of A/NZ, Canterbury has higher spending on community-based services; and lower spending on emergency hospital care | No specific data | No specific data | No specific data | The financial performance of Midlands-based Health Care Homes practices was reported to have been maintained or improved [ |
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