Authors
Jacqueline S Martin, Wolfgang Ummenhofer, Tanja Manser, Rebecca Spirig
Publication date
2010/5/8
Source
Swiss medical weekly
Volume
140
Issue
1718
Pages
1-12
Description
Deficiencies in collaboration and communication between healthcare professionals have a negative impact on the provision of healthcare and on patient outcomes. Policymakers and healthcare managers, as well as clinicians and practitioners, are aware of this and have a growing interest in improving these relationships. To establish new models of care delivery it is necessary to determine the interventions that are most effective in furthering interprofessional collaboration. This article provides an overview of the evidence base for interprofessional collaboration involving doctors and nurses and new models of care in relation to patient outcomes.
Two authors conducted independent literature searches in PubMed, CINAHL, and Cochrane Library and selected fourteen randomised-controlled trials (RCT) for review. All of the RCTs originated from western countries, and the majority tested collaborative care management models against usual care within the elderly population. The major components of the interventions involved individual evidence-based treatment plans, care coordination, health status monitoring, coaching in self-management and promotion of community-based services. They varied between a few days’ and three years’ duration. Outcome measures incorporated mortality, clinical, functional and social outcomes, and utilisation of medical services. Some studies also used patient-reported outcomes.
Total citations
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