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Implementing integrated care: A synthesis of experiences in three European countries

Authors :
Guy J. Schulpen
Alexander Pimperl
Helmut Hildebrandt
Anne Frølich
Ellen Nolte
Hubertus J. M. Vrijhoef
Source :
BASE-Bielefeld Academic Search Engine
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2016.

Abstract

Many countries are experimenting with new models to better integrate care; yet, innovative care models are often implemented as time-limited, localised projects with limited impact on service delivery more broadly. This paper seeks to understand the processes behind successful projects that achieved some form of ‘routinisation’ and informed system-wide integrated care strategies. It draws on detailed case studies of three integrated care experiments: the ‘Integrated effort for people living with chronic diseases’ project in Denmark; the Gesundes Kinzigtal network in Germany; and Zio, a care group in the Maastricht region in the Netherlands. It explores how they were developed, implemented and sustained, and how they impacted the wider system context. All three models implicitly or explicitly adopted processes shown to be conducive to the dissemination of innovations, including dedicated time and resources, support and advocacy, leadership and management, stakeholder involvement, communication and networks, adaptation to local context and feedback. Each showed robust evidence of improvements on a number of service and patient outcomes and these findings were central to their wider impacts, shaping country-wide integrated care polices. However, the wider dissemination of projects occurred in an incremental and somewhat haphazard way. To further redesign health and social care a more formal strategy, alongside resources, may thus be needed to provide funders and providers with genuine incentives to invest in new business models of care. There remains a crucial need for better understanding of specific local conditions that influence implementation and sustainability to enable translation to other contexts and settings.

Details

ISSN :
20534353 and 20534345
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Care Coordination
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e9a4e02309c8267d867936b67fffc64d