Experiences and preliminary effects of the Comprehensive chrOnic caRe outpatiEnt (CORE) clinic for patients with multimorbidity in the hospital setting.
Autor: | Remers, Toine E. P., Jeurissen, Patrick P. T., Coremans, Annemiek, Olde Rikkert, Marcel G. M., van Dulmen, Simone A. |
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Předmět: |
HEALTH services accessibility
HEALTH literacy HUMAN services programs RESEARCH funding QUALITATIVE research FOCUS groups PRIMARY health care MEDICAL care EVALUATION of human services programs INTERVIEWING EVALUATION of medical care DESCRIPTIVE statistics CAREGIVERS RESEARCH methodology RESEARCH TRUST PATIENT satisfaction COMORBIDITY INTEGRATED health care delivery MEDICAL care costs EVALUATION |
Zdroj: | Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice; Oct2024, Vol. 30 Issue 7, p1361-1372, 12p |
Abstrakt: | Rationale: Healthcare systems remain disease oriented despite growing sustainability concerns caused by inadequate management of patients with multimorbidity. Comprehensive care programmes (CCPs) can play an important role in streamlining care delivery, but large differences in setup and results hinder firm conclusions on their effectiveness. Many elements for successful implementation of CCPs are identified, but strategies to overcome barriers and embed programmes within health systems remain unknown. Aims and Objectives: To address this knowledge gap through a detailed study of implementing a CCP in a Dutch hospital setting, including patient experiences, facilitators, barriers and ways to overcome those barriers. Additionally, this study aims to explore effects on patient satisfaction and healthcare use. Methods: A qualitative study design with 39 semistructured interviews and focus groups between July 2020 and February 2023 with 16 patients and 17 involved professionals. Additionally, effects on quantitative outcomes for patient satisfaction (PACIC‐20) and healthcare use were explored. Results: Professionals expressed a wide range of topics related to implementation and ways to overcome barriers at hospital and system level. Alterations in the design to accommodate varying care demands, focus on inclusions through referrals, and lack of long‐term support and appropriate financing were key topics. Patients expressed varying experiences, stated a strong desire for comprehensive information, and emphasised the importance of trust in caregivers. Patient satisfaction showed no effects, while healthcare use showed slight decreases in trends, but patient numbers were limited. Conclusion: The introduction of a CCP is feasible, and exploratory analysis on effectiveness shows lower hospital care use without decreasing patient satisfaction. However, this is accompanied by several challenges that show current fragmented systems still do not support implementation of integrated care initiatives. Overcoming those comes with substantial costs and may require a strong bottom‐up implementation within a motivated team and actions on all levels of healthcare systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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