Focus groups to explore healthcare professionals’ experiences of care coordination: towards a theoretical framework for the study of care coordination

BackgroundStrategies to improve care coordination between primary and hospital care do not always have the desired results. This is partly due to incomplete understanding of the key concepts of care coordination. An in-depth analysis of existing theoretical frameworks for the study of care coordination identified 14 interrelated key concepts. In another study, these 14 key concepts were further explored in patients’ experiences. Additionally, “patient characteristics” was identified as a new key concept in patients’ experiences and the previously identified key concept “quality of relationship” between healthcare professionals was extended to “quality of relationship” with the patient. Together, these 15 interrelated key concepts resulted in a new theoretical framework. The present study aimed at improving our understanding of the 15 previously identified key concepts and to explore potentially previous unidentified key concepts and the links between these by exploring how healthcare professionals experience care coordination.MethodsA qualitative design was used. Six focus groups were conducted including primary healthcare professionals involved in the care of patients who had breast cancer surgery at three hospitals in Belgium. Data were analyzed using constant comparative analysis.ResultsAll 15 previously identified key concepts of care coordination were further explored in healthcare professionals’ experiences. Links between these 15 concepts were identified, including 9 newly identified links.The concept “external factors” was linked with all 6 concepts relating to (inter)organizational mechanisms; “task characteristics”, “structure”, “knowledge and information technology”, “administrative operational processes”, “cultural factors” and “need for coordination”. Five of these concepts related to 3 concepts of relational coordination; “roles”, “quality of relationship” and “exchange of information”. The concept of “task characteristics” was only linked with “roles” and “exchange of information”. The concept “patient characteristics” related with the concepts “need for coordination” and “patient outcome”. Outcome was influenced by “roles”, “quality of relationship” and “exchange of information”.ConclusionsExternal factors and the (inter)organizational mechanism should enhance “roles” and “quality of relationship” between healthcare professionals and with the patient as well as “exchange of information”, and setting and sharing of common “goals” to improve care coordination and quality of care.

[1]  J. De Maeseneer,et al.  James Mackenzie Lecture 2011: multimorbidity, goal-oriented care, and equity. , 2012, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[2]  A. Gardner,et al.  Views and experiences of nurse practitioners and medical practitioners with collaborative practice in primary health care – an integrative review , 2013, BMC Family Practice.

[3]  Derek Layder Sociological Practice: Linking Theory and Social Research , 1998 .

[4]  K Vanhaecht,et al.  Effects of clinical pathways in the joint replacement: a meta-analysis , 2009, BMC medicine.

[5]  V. Raveis,et al.  "I'm not going to die from the AIDS": resilience in aging with HIV disease. , 2011, The Gerontologist.

[6]  M. Euwema,et al.  Indicators for Follow-Up of Multidisciplinary Teamwork in Care Processes , 2011, Evaluation & the health professions.

[7]  Kent Nakamoto,et al.  Patient behavior and the benefits of artificial intelligence: the perils of "dangerous" literacy and illusory patient empowerment. , 2013, Patient education and counseling.

[8]  G. Freeman,et al.  An exploration of the value of the personal doctor-patient relationship in general practice. , 2001, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[9]  Kris Vanhaecht,et al.  An in-depth analysis of theoretical frameworks for the study of care coordination , 2013, International journal of integrated care.

[10]  T O'Dowd,et al.  Effectiveness of shared care across the interface between primary and specialty care in chronic disease management. , 2007, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[11]  T. Bodenheimer Coordinating care--a perilous journey through the health care system. , 2008, The New England journal of medicine.

[12]  W. Baine,et al.  The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality , 2006, Italian Journal of Public Health.

[13]  Jody Hoffer Gittell,et al.  Coordinating Mechanisms in Care Provider Groups: Relational Coordination as a Mediator and Input Uncertainty as a Moderator of Performance Effects , 2002 .

[14]  C. Spreeuwenberg,et al.  Integrated care: meaning, logic, applications, and implications – a discussion paper , 2002, International journal of integrated care.

[15]  Eva Lidén,et al.  Patient participation in discharge planning conference , 2014, International journal of integrated care.

[16]  P. Butow,et al.  What is important in cancer care coordination? A qualitative investigation. , 2011, European journal of cancer care.

[17]  G. Elwyn,et al.  BMC Family Practice , 2005 .

[18]  A. Bryman Social Research Methods , 2001 .

[19]  Leigh Weiss,et al.  Coordination Networks within and Across Organizations: A Multi-Level Framework , 2004 .

[20]  T. Blakeman,et al.  Experiences of care planning in England: interviews with patients with long term conditions , 2012, BMC Family Practice.

[21]  J. H. Gittell Organizing work to support relational co-ordination , 2000 .