BMC Health Services Research (Nov 2022)

How health systems facilitate patient-centered care and care coordination: a case series analysis to identify best practices

  • Kaitlyn Simpson,
  • Wilson Nham,
  • Josh Thariath,
  • Hannah Schafer,
  • Margaret Greenwood-Eriksen,
  • Michael D. Fetters,
  • David Serlin,
  • Timothy Peterson,
  • Mahshid Abir

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-022-08623-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Large- and small-scale transformation of healthcare delivery toward improved patient experience through promotion of patient-centered and coordinated care continues to be at the forefront of health system efforts in the United States. As part of a Quality Improvement (QI) project at a large, midwestern health system, a case series of high-performing organizations was explored with the goal of identifying best practices in patient-centered care and/or care coordination (PCC/CC). Identification of best practices was done through rapid realist review of peer-reviewed literature supporting three PCC/CC interventions per case. Mechanisms responsible for successful intervention outcomes and associated institutional-level facilitators were evaluated, and cross-case analysis produced high-level focus items for health system leadership, including (1) institutional values surrounding PCC/CC, (2) optimization of IT infrastructure to enhance performance and communication, (3) pay structures and employment models that enhance accountability, and (4) organizing bodies to support implementation efforts. Health systems may use this review to gain insight into how institutional-level factors may facilitate small-scale PCC/CC behaviors, or to conduct similar assessments in their own QI projects. Based on our analysis, we recommend health systems seeking to improve PCC/CC at any level or scale to evaluate how IT infrastructure affects provider-provider and provider-patient communication, and the extent to which institutional prioritization of PCC/CC is manifest and held accountable in performance feedback, incentivization, and values shared among departments and settings. Ideally, this evaluation work should be performed and/or supported by cross-department organizing bodies specifically devoted to PCC/CC implementation work.

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