Abstract

BackgroundIn complex health settings, care coordination is required to link patients to appropriate and effective care. Although articulated as system and professional values, coordination and cooperation are often absent within and across levels of service, between facilities and across sectors, with negative consequences for clinical outcomes as well as service load.AimThis article presents the results of an applied research initiative to facilitate the coordination of patient care.SettingThe study took place at three hospitals in the sub-district 3 public health complex (Tshwane district).MethodUsing a novel capability approach to learning, interdisciplinary, clinician-led teams made weekly coordination-of-care ward rounds to develop patient-centred plans and facilitate care pathways for patients identified as being stuck in the system. Notes taken during three-stage assessments were analysed thematically to gain insight into down referral and discharge.ResultsThe coordination-of-care team assessed 94 patients over a period of six months. Clinical assessments yielded essential details about patients’ varied and multimorbid conditions, while personal and contextual assessments highlighted issues that put patients’ care needs and possibilities into perspective. The team used the combined assessments to make patient-tailored action plans and apply them by facilitating cooperation through interprofessional and intersectoral networks.ConclusionEffective patient care-coordination involves a set of referral practices and processes that are intentionally organised by clinically led, interprofessional teams. Empowered by richly informed plans, the teams foster cooperation among people, organisations and institutions in networks that extend from and to patients. In so doing, they embed care coordination into the discharge process and make referral to a link-to-care service.

Highlights

  • South Africa’s current public healthcare delivery model seeks to achieve improved health outcomes by employing safe, accessible and efficient quality services.[1,2,3] The system is organised hierarchically with primary healthcare rendered in districts by district hospitals, community health centres (CHCs) and clinic facilities as well as through community outreach teams and ambulance services

  • Results are presented under the following headings: (1) demographics, (2) the three-stage assessment and (3) parallel care-coordination

  • This study shows that clinical assessments yield essential details about the status of patients’ varied and multimorbid conditions, while personal and contextual assessments put patient care needs and possibilities into perspective

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Summary

Introduction

South Africa’s current public healthcare delivery model seeks to achieve improved health outcomes by employing safe, accessible and efficient quality services.[1,2,3] The system is organised hierarchically with primary healthcare (level 1) rendered in districts by district hospitals, community health centres (CHCs) and clinic facilities as well as through community outreach teams and ambulance services. Referral is an intentional systems design feature to enable service continuity and ensure access to and cost-effective use of public healthcare services.[7] In institutionally complex health settings, referral pathways based on reasonable clinical processes seldom achieve health system responsiveness, organisational efficiency and improved population health outcomes[8,9,10] without proactive and deliberate care-coordination. Articulated as system and professional values, coordination and cooperation are often absent within and across levels of service, between facilities and across sectors, with negative consequences for clinical outcomes as well as service load

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