Abstract

BackgroundHealthcare systems are challenged by a demand that exceeds available resources. One policy to meet this challenge is task substitution-transferring tasks to other professions and settings. Our study aimed to explore stakeholders’ perceived feasibility of transferring hospital-based monitoring of stable glaucoma patients to primary care optometrists.MethodsA case study was undertaken in the Rotterdam Eye Hospital (REH) using semi-structured interviews and document reviews. They were inductively analysed using three implementation related theoretical perspectives: sociological theories on professionalism, management theories, and applied political analysis.ResultsCurrently it is not feasible to use primary care optometrists as substitutes for optometrists and ophthalmic technicians working in a hospital-based glaucoma follow-up unit (GFU). Respondents’ narratives revealed that: the glaucoma specialists’ sense of urgency for task substitution outside the hospital diminished after establishing a GFU that satisfied their professionalization needs; the return on investments were unclear; and reluctant key stakeholders with strong power positions blocked implementation. The window of opportunity that existed for task substitution in person and setting in 1999 closed with the institutionalization of the GFU.ConclusionsTransferring the monitoring of stable glaucoma patients to primary care optometrists in Rotterdam did not seem feasible. The main reasons were the lack of agreement on professional boundaries and work domains, the institutionalization of the GFU in the REH, and the absence of an appropriate reimbursement system. Policy makers considering substituting tasks to other professionals should carefully think about the implementation process, especially in a two-step implementation process (substitution in person and in setting) such as this case. Involving the substituting professionals early on to ensure all stakeholders see the change as a normal step in the professionalization of the substituting professionals is essential, as is implementing the task substitution within the window of opportunity.

Highlights

  • Healthcare systems are challenged by a demand that exceeds available resources

  • [7] Task substitution can be realised with people, settings, or both

  • Unlike the primary care optometrists, most hospitalbased glaucoma specialists over time were unwilling to collaborate in the scheme

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Summary

Introduction

Healthcare systems are challenged by a demand that exceeds available resources. Healthcare systems across many countries face a challenge in responding to growing demands for physicians’ and nurses’ care with increasing limitations on human and financial resources [1,2]. The successful implementation of task substitution is at least partially influenced by contextual factors, such as local stakeholder interests [27,28,29,30], power positions [31,32], and the structure of the healthcare system, including its financing [33]. It seems worthwhile to broaden the scope of evaluation and include the professional, organizational, financial, and political contexts within which task substitution is implemented [34]

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