Abstract

Integrated care offers an opportunity to address healthcare efficiency and effectiveness concerns and is especially relevant for elderly patients with different chronic illnesses. In current care standards for chronic care focus is often on one disease. The chronic care model (CCM) is used as the basis of integrated care programs. It identifies essential components that encourage high-quality chronic disease care, involving the community and health system and including self-management support, delivery system design, decision support, and clinical information systems. Improvements in those interrelated components can produce system reform in which informed, activated patients interact with prepared, proactive practice teams. There is however a lack of research evidence for the impact of the chronic care model as a full model. Integrated care programs have widely varying definitions and components and failure to recognize these variations leads to inappropriate conclusions about the effectiveness of these programs and to inappropriate application of research results. It seems important to carefully consider the type and amount of data that are collected within the disease management programs for several purposes, as well as the methods of data collection. Understanding and changing the behavior of complex dynamic chronic care system requires an appreciation of its key patterns, leverage points and constraints. A different theoretical framework, that embraces complexity, is required. Research should be design-based, context bound and address relationships among agents in order to provide solutions that address locally defined demands and circumstances.

Highlights

  • This paper reflects on current policy, research and programs of integrated care, reveals the gap between science and practice and provides a new perspective on research and development of integrated care.Because of a higher number of elderly dependant service users with chronic illnesses and limited financial resources we seek fundamental changes in the way healthcare systems operate

  • Integrated care programs have widely varying definitions and components and failure to recognize these variations leads to inappropriate conclusions about the effectiveness of these programs and to inappropriate application of research results

  • Understanding and changing the behavior of complex dynamic chronic care system requires an appreciation of its key patterns, leverage points and constraints

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Summary

Introduction

This paper reflects on current policy, research and programs of integrated care, reveals the gap between science and practice and provides a new perspective on research and development of integrated care. Integrated care offers an opportunity to address healthcare efficiency and effectiveness concerns. This is a multi-level, multimodal, demand driven and patient-centered strategy designed to address complex and costly health needs by achieving better coordination of services across the entire care continuum [1]. Many programs for chronic care are written for groups with one disease from the perspective of the professional. The perspective of the patient is often underexposed, differences and different needs of patients are not addressed in these programs and the fact that elderly patients have often more than one chronic disease is not taken into account [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. In hospitals care is fragmented and patients with multiple illnesses carry the burden of their illnesses, and the burden of their multiple treatments [4, 12]

Dutch policy and prevention
Programmatic approach in the Netherlands and the chronic care model
International research
Future research
Conclusion
From the author
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