Interprofessional collaboration between general practitioners and home nurses in Belgium: a participatory action research.

Introduction: Interprofessional Collaboration (IPC) has long been considered as an essential principle underpinning effective primary health care, [1]. The Belgian primary care level is characterized by a shortage of General practitioners (GPs), the absence of shared patients list between GPs and home nurses, and a diversity of practices and payment systems. The Belgian population is aging and suffering from chronic diseases [2]. It becomes essential to enable primary healthcare providers to face these sociodemographic changes and increased health and social care needs. We therefore aim at 1)... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Karam, Marlène
Macq, Jean
Duchesnes, Christiane
Crismer, André
Belche, JeanLuc
International Conference on Integrated Care 19
Dokumenttyp: conferenceObject
Erscheinungsdatum: 2019
Schlagwörter: interprofessional collaboration / nurses / general practitioners
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26994254
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/216312

Introduction: Interprofessional Collaboration (IPC) has long been considered as an essential principle underpinning effective primary health care, [1]. The Belgian primary care level is characterized by a shortage of General practitioners (GPs), the absence of shared patients list between GPs and home nurses, and a diversity of practices and payment systems. The Belgian population is aging and suffering from chronic diseases [2]. It becomes essential to enable primary healthcare providers to face these sociodemographic changes and increased health and social care needs. We therefore aim at 1) assessing IPC between GPs and nurses; 2) identifying target priorities for improving IPC; and 3) endorsing their improvement projects. Methods: A participatory action research (PAR) was initiated based on the methodological scheme for health systems research of Mercenier [3]. Six groups of GPs and nurses were chosen based on diversity of practices, payment systems, environment, and resources. Researchers met on a monthly basis with participants of each area. The conceptual model of Reeves on teamwork was used as a descriptive model for this PAR[4]. Preliminary results (ongoing research): Each group performed a SWOT analysis of their collaborative practice. Identified strengths were about shared values and objectives, previous positive experiences of IPC, and recognition of each other’s competencies and specific roles. Weaknesses revolved around managerial and informational fragmentation, hierarchical relations, lack of trust, lack of consideration, and lack of responsibilities clarification. Opportunities and threats were related to the different financing systems which impeded or facilitated multidisciplinary team meetings and communication, the weak functional integration, the shortage of workforces, the lack of shared patients list, and the lack of of interprofessional education. Two issues were co-identified as common priorities: communication and task delegation. Actions prioritized by each area were related to these ...