7 results on '"Gray, Carolyn Steele"'
Search Results
2. Implementing Community Based Primary Healthcare for Older Adults with Complex Needs in Quebec, Ontario and New-Zealand: Describing Nine Cases.
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Breton, Mylaine, Gray, Carolyn Steele, Sheridan, Nicolette, Shaw, Jay, Parsons, John, Wankah, Paul, Kenealy, Timothy, Baker, Ross, Belzile, Louise, Couturier, Yves, Denis, Jean-Louis, and Wodchis, Walter P.
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PRIMARY care , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH policy - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to set the foundation for subsequent empirical studies of the "Implementing models of primary care for older adults with complex needs" project, by introducing and presenting a brief descriptive comparison of the nine case studies in Quebec, Ontario and New Zealand. Each case is described based on key dimensions of Rainbow model of Valentijn and al (2013) with a focus on "meso level" integration. Meso level integration is represented by organizational and professional elements of the Rainbow Model, which are of particular interest in our nine case studies. Each of the three cases in Ontario and three in New Zealand are different and described separately. In Quebec, a local health services network model is presented across the three cases studied with variations in the way it is implemented. The three cases selected in the three jurisdictions under study were not chosen to be representative of wider practice within each country, but rather represent interesting and unique models of communitybased primary healthcare integration. Similarities and variations in the integrated care models, context and dimension of integration offer insights regarding core component of integration of services, offering a foundational understanding of the cases on which future analysis will be based. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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3. Organizational Context Matters: A Research Toolkit for Conducting Standardized Case Studies of Integrated Care Initiatives.
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Evans, Jenna M., Grudniewicz, Agnes, Gray, Carolyn Steele, Wodchis, Walter P., Carswell, Peter, and Baker, G. Ross
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INTEGRATED health care delivery ,HEALTH care industry ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
Introduction: The variable success of integrated care initiatives has led experts to recommend tailoring design and implementation to the organizational context. Yet, organizational contexts are rarely described, understood, or measured with sufficient depth and breadth in empirical studies or in practice. We thus lack knowledge of when and specifically how organizational contexts matter. To facilitate the accumulation of evidence, we developed a research toolkit for conducting case studies using standardized measures of the (inter-)organizational context for integrating care. Theory and Methods: We used a multi-method approach to develop the research toolkit: (1) development and validation of the Context and Capabilities for Integrating Care (CCIC) Framework, (2) identification, assessment, and selection of survey instruments, (3) development of document review methods, (4) development of interview guide resources, and (5) pilot testing of the document review guidelines, consolidated survey, and interview guide. Results: The toolkit provides a framework and measurement tools that examine 18 organizational and inter-organizational factors that affect the implementation and success of integrated care initiatives. Discussion and Conclusion: The toolkit can be used to characterize and compare organizational contexts across cases and enable comparison of results across studies. This information can enhance our understanding of the influence of organizational contexts, support the transfer of best practices, and help explain why some integrated care initiatives succeed and some fail. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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4. Understanding the Attributes of Implementation Frameworks to Guide the Implementation of a Model of Community-based Integrated Health Care for Older Adults with Complex Chronic Conditions: A Metanarrative Review.
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McKillop, Ann, Shaw, Jay, Sheridan, Nicolette, Gray, Carolyn Steele, Carswell, Peter, Wodchis, Walter P., Connolly, Martin, Denis, Jean-Louis, Baker, G. Ross, and Kenealy, Timothy
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INTEGRATED health care delivery ,PRIMARY care ,MEDICAL care for older people ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
Introduction: Many studies have investigated the process of healthcare implementation to understand better how to bridge gaps between recommended practice, the needs and demands of healthcare consumers, and what they actually receive. However, in the implementation of integrated communitybased and integrated health care, it is still not well known which approaches work best. Methods: We conducted a systematic review and metanarrative synthesis of literature on implementation frameworks, theories and models in support of a research programme investigating CBPHC for older adults with chronic health problems. Results: Thirty-five reviews met our inclusion criteria and were appraised, summarised, and synthesised. Five metanarratives emerged 1) theoretical constructs; 2) multiple influencing factors; 3) development of new frameworks; 4) application of existing frameworks; and 5) effectiveness of interventions within frameworks/models. Four themes were generated that exposed the contradictions and synergies among the metanarratives. Person-centred care is fundamental to integrated CBPHC at all levels in the health care delivery system, yet many implementation theories and frameworks neglect this cornerstone. Discussion: The research identified perspectives central to integrated CBPHC that were missing in the literature. Context played a key role in determining success and in how consumers and their families, providers, organisations and policy-makers stay connected to implementing the best care possible. Conclusions: All phases of implementation of a new model of CBPHC call for collaborative partnerships with all stakeholders, the most important being the person receiving care in terms of what matters most to them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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5. Mapping for conceptual clarity: Exploring implementation of integrated community-based primary health care from a whole system perspective.
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Gray, Carolyn Steele, Wodchis, Walter P., Baker, G. Ross, Carswell, Peter, Sheridan, Nicolette F., Breton, Mylaine, Kenealy, Tim, McKillop, Ann, and Parsons, John
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PRIMARY health care , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *HEALTH policy - Abstract
Background: Studying implementation of integrated models of community-based primary health care takes a "whole systems" multidisciplinary approach to capture micro (patient/carer and provider), meso (organization) and macro (system/policy) factors. In new research studying the implementation of these integrated models intended to improve care for older adults with complex care needs, our project team adopted four theoretical perspectives to capture micro, meso and macro factors influencing implementation. Problem Statement: Four theoretical and disciplinary perspectives were adopted to guide data collection and analysis. These perspectives were guided by 1) Wagner's Chronic Care Model as related to Ham's 10 Dimensions of High Performing Chronic Care Systems addressing patient/caregiver and provider level perspectives; 2) the Organizational Context and Capabilities for Integrating Care framework capturing organizational and provider level perspectives; and 3) the Health Policy Monitor survey methodology covering system and policy level perspectives. The different perspectives capture a wide breadth of concepts; however there is also significant conceptual overlap across those frameworks. The nature of this overlap requires clarification in order to: 1) ensure efficient data collection at the case sites; and 2) guide inter-disciplinary data analysis. Theory/Methods: Concept mapping was used to identify connections between the concepts across perspectives. Novak and Canas (2007)'s methods and software CmapTools were used to first generate a descriptive map. We explored the conceptual links of the map using data from 1 case studies in Ontario collected as part of the iCOACH project. Results: The concept map reveals many links across policy/system, organizational, provider and patient/carer theoretical perspectives. Examination of the overlap between concepts related to care coordination reveals different meanings, approaches, and implementations, depending on from which perspective you start. For instance, from a policy perspective care coordination is related to how services are delivered and delivery arrangements, the organizational perspective highlights inter-organizational linkages and collaboration, the provider perspective focuses on teamwork and community linkages, and the patient and carer perspective emphasizes the experience of coordinated care. Conclusions: Our analysis reveals that while concepts from different theoretical perspectives and disciplines may be similar in definition, each perspective offers a different meaning, value and driver associated with similar concepts. This analysis highlights the importance of developing a "whole system" perspective, and how concept mapping can be used to guide this approach to data collection and analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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6. Mechanisms, contexts and points of contention: operationalizing realist-informed research for complex health interventions.
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Shaw, James, Gray, Carolyn Steele, Baker, G. Ross, Denis, Jean-Louis, Breton, Mylaine, Gutberg, Jennifer, Embuldeniya, Gaya, Carswell, Peter, Dunham, Annette, McKillop, Ann, Kenealy, Timothy, Sheridan, Nicolette, and Wodchis, Walter
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PRIMARY health care , *HEALTH policy , *EMPIRICAL research , *REASONING , *REALISM - Abstract
Background: The concept of "mechanism" is central to realist approaches to research, yet research teams struggle to operationalize and apply the concept in empirical research. Our large, interdisciplinary research team has also experienced challenges in making the concept useful in our study of the implementation of models of integrated community-based primary health care (ICBPHC) in three international jurisdictions (Ontario and Quebec in Canada, and in New Zealand).Methods: In this paper we summarize definitions of mechanism found in realist methodological literature, and report an empirical example of a realist analysis of the implementation ICBPHC.Results: We use our empirical example to illustrate two points. First, the distinction between contexts and mechanisms might ultimately be arbitrary, with more distally located mechanisms becoming contexts as research teams focus their analytic attention more proximally to the outcome of interest. Second, the relationships between mechanisms, human reasoning, and human agency need to be considered in greater detail to inform realist-informed analysis; understanding these relationships is fundamental to understanding the ways in which mechanisms operate through individuals and groups to effect the outcomes of complex health interventions.Conclusions: We conclude our paper with reflections on human agency and outline the implications of our analysis for realist research and realist evaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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7. Shifting paradigms: Developmental milestones for integrated care.
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Shaw, James, Gutberg, Jennifer, Wankah, Paul, Kadu, Mudathira, Gray, Carolyn Steele, McKillop, Ann, Baker, G. Ross, Breton, Mylaine, and Wodchis, Walter P.
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INTERVIEWING , *PARADIGMS (Social sciences) , *PRIMARY health care , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Frameworks for understanding integrated care risk underemphasizing the complexities of the development of integrated care in a local context. The objectives of this article are to (1) present a novel strategy for conceptualizing integrated care as developing through a series of milestones at the organizational level, and (2) present a typology of milestones empirically generated through the analysis of four cases of integrated community-based primary health care (ICBPHC) in Canada and New Zealand. Our paper reports on an analysis of 4 specific organizational case studies within a large dataset generated for an international multiple case study project of exemplar models of ICBPHC. Drawing on earlier analyses of 359 qualitative interviews with patients, caregivers, health care providers, managers, and policymakers, in this article we present a detailed analysis of 28 interviews with managers and leaders of local models of integrated care. We generated a detailed timeline of the development of integrated care as expressed by each participant, and synthesized themes across timelines within each case to identify specific milestone events. We then synthesized across cases to generate the broader milestone categories to which each event belongs. We generated 5 milestone categories containing 12 more specific milestone events. The milestone categories include (1) strategic relational, (2) strategic process change, (3) internal structural, (4) inter-organizational structural, and (5) external milestones. We propose a comprehensive framework of developmental milestones for integrated care. Milestones represent a compelling strategy for conceptualizing the development of integrated care. Practically, policymakers and health care leaders can support the implementation of integrated care by examining the history and context of a given model of care and identifying strategies to achieve milestones that will accelerate integrated care. Further research should document additional milestone events and advance the development of dynamic frameworks for integrated care. • Developmental milestones accelerate or decelerate achievement of integrated care. • 5 categories of milestones are identified. • A comprehensive framework for milestones of integrated care is proposed. • Implementation strategies should be based on past milestones achieved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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