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Integrated care for the frail and elderly: a review of the evidence by Susan Smith and John Gale (JET Library, Mid-Cheshire NHS Foundation Trust) Contents Evidence Review .............................................................................................................................. 8 Rapid evidence review to inform the case for change: long-term conditions and frailty / Shiona Aldridge and Alison Turner (attached file) Central Midlands Commissioning Support Unit, 2014 .... 8 Other Trusts’ projects.................................................................................................................... 8 A new and short-stay unit for frail and elderly patients ..................................................................... 8 Better care for elderly and diabetic patients ...................................................................................... 8 Age UK's integrated care pilot to be rolled out across England. ........................................................ 8 Better Care Fund Plan - Integrating Health and Social Care in Central Bedfordshire......................... 9 Birmingham and Solihull frail elderly programme plan (2012) (see attached file) ............................ 9 Burton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Strategic Plan – 2014-2019 (see attached file) ................... 9 Bringing together the health and care system with the fire service .................................................. 9 Effective integration of acute and community services for frail older people: South Warwickshire NHS Foundation Trust (2012) (see attached file) ............................................................................... 9 Evaluation of complex integrated care programmes: the approach in North West London. ............ 9 High quality lifelong care .................................................................................................................. 10 Integrated Care and Support Pioneer Programme Annual Report 2014 – NHS England ................. 10 Integrated care pilots launched. ....................................................................................................... 11 Integrated care pioneer programme: annual report 2014 / NHS England (see attached file) ......... 11 Integrated care scheme for older people will roll out across England. ............................................ 11 Integrated care pilot programme: ensuring people with dementia receive joined up care ............ 12 Integrating community services for patients with multiple long-term conditions and the frail elderly / Balmer, Jan (Mid-Nottinghamshire Integrated Care Transformation Programme) (see attached file) ..................................................................................................................................... 12 New care models – vanguard sites – NHS England web sites........................................................... 12 Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust: clinical strategy 2012/13-2015/6 (2014) (see attached file) ...... 13 Solent NHS Trust: integrated business plan (see attached file)........................................................ 13 Summary of integrated care projects: Bolton, Salford and Trafford (2013) (see attached file)....... 13 The North West London Integrated Care Pilot: Innovative strategies to improve care coordination for older adults and people with diabetes........................................................................................ 13 Transforming the care of the frail older person / The Community Programme (various bodies in the East Midlands) (see attached file) .............................................................................................. 14 Whittington Health NHS Trust: 13/14 annual report (see attached file) ......................................... 14 The Policy Background ................................................................................................................ 14 Building the house – the House of Care toolkit ................................................................................ 14 Disability, dementia and frailty in later life – mid-life approaches to prevention............................ 14 Fit for frailty: consensus best practice guidance for the care of older people living with frailty in community and outpatient settings / British Geriatrics Society (2014) (see attached file) ............. 14 Making our health and care systems fit for an ageing population / Oliver, David, Foot, Catherine and Humphries, Richard (King’s Fund, 2014) (see attached file) ...................................................... 15 Person centred care made simple: what everyone should know about person-centred care. Quick Guide. ................................................................................................................................................ 15 Safe, compassionate care for frail older people using an integrated care pathway: practical guidance for commissioners, providers and nursing, medical and allied health professional leaders – NHS England, South, Report (see attached file)............................................................................. 15 Think frailty: improving the identification and management of frailty – a case study report of innovation on four acute sites in NHS Scotland / NHS Scotland (2014) (see attached file) ............. 15 Towards whole person care. ............................................................................................................. 15 European Initiatives ..................................................................................................................... 16 A Slovenian model of integrated care for older people can offer solutions for NHS services. ........ 16 Diagnostic study, design and implementation of an integrated model of care in France: a bottomup process with continuous leadership. ........................................................................................... 16 Health and social care in aging population: an integrated care institution for the elderly in Greece. .......................................................................................................................................................... 17 Implementing the chronic care model for frail older adults in the Netherlands: study protocol of ACT (frail older adults: care in transition) ......................................................................................... 18 Integrated care for the elderly: the background and effects of the reform of Swedish care of the elderly. .............................................................................................................................................. 19 Integrated care for older people in Europe-latest trends and perceptions. .................................... 19 Integrated care for vulnerable older people in Denmark ................................................................. 20 Organizing integrated care for older persons: strategies in Sweden during the past decade. ........ 20 Ten years of integrated care for the older in France. ....................................................................... 21 The 2008-2012 French Alzheimer plan: a unique opportunity for improving integrated care for dementia. .......................................................................................................................................... 22 The first general practitioner hospital in The Netherlands: Towards a new form of integrated care? .......................................................................................................................................................... 23 Academic Research ...................................................................................................................... 24 5-year Medicaid cost savings from integrating home and community based services with a housecall practice: Elder partnership for all-inclusive care (EPAC) ............................................................ 24 A cost-effectiveness study of a patient-centred integrated care pathway ...................................... 25 A literature review to explore integrated care for older people. ..................................................... 26 A novel model of integrated care for the elderly: COPA, coordination of professional care for the elderly ............................................................................................................................................... 26 A system of integrated care for older persons with disabilities in Canada: Results from a randomized controlled trial .............................................................................................................. 27 A systematic review of different models of home and community care services for older persons. .......................................................................................................................................................... 28 A systematic review of integrated working between care homes and health care services ........... 29 Accountable care organisations in the United Sates and England: testing, evaluating and learning what works / Stephen Shortell … et al (King’s Fund, 2014) (see attached file) ................................ 30 An integrated care pathway project ................................................................................................. 31 An integrated care program for hip fracture in Singapore ............................................................... 31 Attitudes towards integrated care pathways in the UK NHS: A pilot study in one UK NHS trust .... 33 Better care for frail older people: working differently to improve care - Deloitte........................... 33 Building bonds with nursing homes / Butcher, Lola Hospitals and Health Networks May 2015 ..... 34 Care for Canada's frail elderly population: Fragmentation or integration? ..................................... 34 Caregiver satisfaction with support services: influence of different types of services. ................... 34 Care transitions for frail, older people from acute hospital wards within an integrated care system in England: a qualitative case study / Lesley Baillie … [et al] ............................................................ 35 Case management for at-risk elderly patients in the English integrated care pilots: observational study of staff and patient experience and secondary care utilisation.............................................. 35 Commonwealth Care Alliance. A new approach to coordinated care for the chronically ill and frail elderly that organizationally integrates consumer involvement. ..................................................... 36 Cost-effectiveness of integrated care for elderly depressed patients in the PRISM-E study ........... 36 Developing and trial use of the new integrated care pathway for dementia in an urban city in Japan ................................................................................................................................................. 38 Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a proactive, goal-oriented, integrated care model in general practice for older people. A cluster randomized controlled trial: Integrated Systematic Care for older People-the ISCOPE study ........................................................................................... 39 Elder partnership for all-inclusive care (Elder-PAC): 5-year follow-up of integrating care for frail, community elders, linking home based primary care with an area agency on aging (AAA) as an independence at home (IAH) model................................................................................................. 40 Effectiveness of community-based integrated care in frail COPD patients: a randomised controlled trial. ................................................................................................................................................... 41 Effects of multidisciplinary integrated care on quality of care in residential care facilities for elderly people: a cluster randomized trial. ................................................................................................... 41 Embracing integrated care by collaborating in project care with tan tock Seng hospital ................ 42 Enhancing health care in care homes: integration in practice – King’s Fund Blog Post ................... 43 Frail elderly patients. New model for integrated service delivery. .................................................. 43 Frailty pathway integrates service to provide more and better care outside of hospital – NHS Improving Quality ............................................................................................................................. 44 Fully integrated care for frail elderly: two American models ........................................................... 45 House Calls for Seniors: Building and Sustaining a Model of Care for Homebound Seniors ............ 45 Increasing value for money in the Canadian healthcare system: new findings and the case for integrated care for seniors................................................................................................................ 46 Innovative contracting for integrated care: what are the risks and benefits of various contracting methods? / Ricketts, Bob (King’s Fund, 2014) (see attached file) .................................................... 46 Integrated care.................................................................................................................................. 47 Integrated care facilitation for older patients with complex health care needs reduces hospital demand ............................................................................................................................................. 47 Integrated care for frail older people 2012: a clinical overview / Jackie Morris Journal of Integrated .......................................................................................................................................................... 48 Integrated care for older people: examining workforce and implementation challenges / Centre for Workforce Intelligence (2014) (see attached file) ...................................................................... 48 Integrated care for the frail elderly .................................................................................................. 48 Integrated care models for the frail older people [sic]: some international case studies and lessons / Kodner, Dennis L. (see attached file) .............................................................................................. 49 Integrated care summit 2015: the journey from integrated care to population health systems .... 49 Integrated models of care delivery for the frail elderly: International perspectives ....................... 49 Integrated services for dementia: The formal carer experience ...................................................... 50 Integration and continuity of care in health care network models for frail older adults ................. 51 International experiments in integrated care for the elderly: A synthesis of the evidence ............. 51 Interprofessional and integrated care of the elderly in a family health team. ................................ 52 Just for us: An academic medical center-community partnership to maintain the health of a frail low-income senior population .......................................................................................................... 53 Managed long-term care: care integration through care coordination. .......................................... 54 Managing effective partnerships in older people's services ............................................................ 54 Medicaid-funded home care for the frail elderly and disabled: evaluating the cost savings and outcomes of a service delivery reform. ............................................................................................ 55 Opening the black box of clinical collaboration in integrated care models for frail, elderly patients .......................................................................................................................................................... 56 PACE: A model for integrated care of frail older patients ................................................................ 57 Person centred care 2020: calls and contributions form health and social care charities. .............. 57 Physician home visits in homebound ............................................................................................... 58 PRISMA: a new model of integrated service delivery for the frail older people in Canada ............. 59 Progress toward integrating care for seniors in Canada: "We have to skate toward where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been."......................................................................................... 59 Randomised trial of impact of model of integrated care and case management for older people living in the community .................................................................................................................... 60 Reducing hospital bed use by frail older people: results from a systematic review of the literature .......................................................................................................................................................... 61 Successfully integrating aged care services: a review of the evidence and tools emerging from a long-term care program.................................................................................................................... 62 Supporting frail seniors through a family physician and Home Health integrated care model in Fraser Health ..................................................................................................................................... 63 Teams without walls: enabling partnerships between generalists and specialists. ......................... 64 Ten years of integrated care: backwards and forwards. The case of the province of Québec, Canada. ............................................................................................................................................. 64 Test and learn: Working towards integrated services. ..................................................................... 65 The acute and long-term care interface. Integrating the continuum. .............................................. 66 The CareWell in Hospital program to improve the quality of care for frail elderly inpatients: results of a before-after study with focus on surgical patients. ................................................................... 66 The contribution of geriatric medicine to integrated care for older people. ................................... 67 The effects of an integrated care intervention for the frail elderly on informal caregivers: a quasiexperimental study ........................................................................................................................... 68 The future is frail: An innovative approach to managing patients in care homes............................ 69 The Growing Pains of Integrated Health Care for the Elderly: Lessons from the Expansion of PACE .......................................................................................................................................................... 70 The impact of an integrated care service on service users: the service users' perspective ............. 70 The short-term effects of an integrated care model for the frail elderly on health, quality of life, health care use and satisfaction with care ....................................................................................... 71 'Trying to do a jigsaw without the picture on the box': understanding the challenges of care integration in the context of single assessment for older people in England. ................................. 72 Using HIT to deliver integrated care for the frail elderly in the UK: current barriers and future challenges. ........................................................................................................................................ 73 Using principles of transition management while introducing and evaluating a model of care to improve care for frail older inpatients .............................................................................................. 73 Whole-system approaches to health and social care partnerships for the frail elderly: an exploration of North American models and lessons. (See attached file) ......................................... 74 Working towards integrated community care for older people: Empowering organisational features from a professional perspective ......................................................................................... 75 Evidence Review Rapid evidence review to inform the case for change: long-term conditions and frailty / Shiona Aldridge and Alison Turner (attached file) Central Midlands Commissioning Support Unit, 2014 Other Trusts’ projects A new and short-stay unit for frail and elderly patients Southport and Ormskirk NHS Trust are already providing integrated care for the frail and elderly http://www.gmc-uk.org/guidance/25974.asp Better care for elderly and diabetic patients How Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trusts are getting involved in providing care for the frail and elderly http://www.imperial.nhs.uk/aboutus/news/news_030246 Age UK's integrated care pilot to be rolled out across England. Citation: Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987), Apr 2015, vol. 29, no. 35, p. 10. (April 29, 2015) Author(s): Comerford, Cathy Abstract: A pioneering integrated care scheme, whereby community nurses work with trained volunteers to co-ordinate care, has helped reduce unplanned hospital admissions among older people by almost half. Source: Medline Better Care Fund Plan - Integrating Health and Social Care in Central Bedfordshire http://plaintext.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk/Images/integrated%20care%20diagram_tcm852851.pdf#False http://plaintext.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk/health-and-social-care/adult-care/better-carefund/better-care-fund.aspx Birmingham and Solihull frail elderly programme plan (2012) (see attached file) Burton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Strategic Plan – 2014-2019 (see attached file) Burton Hospitals are looking at becoming an integrated care provider (p. 34-36 of this document) Bringing together the health and care system with the fire service How the Fire Service is working with health and social care to provide integrated care in Manchester http://www.nhsiq.nhs.uk/news-events/news/bringing-together-the-health-and-care-system-withthe-%EF%AC%81re-service.aspx Effective integration of acute and community services for frail older people: South Warwickshire NHS Foundation Trust (2012) (see attached file) Evaluation of complex integrated care programmes: the approach in North West London. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2013, vol. 13, p. e006. (2013 Jan-Mar) Author(s): Greaves, Felix, Pappas, Yannis, Bardsley, Martin, Harris, Matthew, Curry, Natasha, Holder, Holly, Blunt, Ian, Soljak, Michael, Gunn, Laura, Majeed, Azeem, Car, Josip Abstract: Several local attempts to introduce integrated care in the English National Health Service have been tried, with limited success. The Northwest London Integrated Care Pilot attempts to improve the quality of care of the elderly and people with diabetes by providing a novel integration process across primary, secondary and social care organisations. It involves predictive risk modelling, care planning, multidisciplinary management of complex cases and an information technology tool to support information sharing. This paper sets out the evaluation approach adopted to measure its effect. We present a mixed methods evaluation methodology. It includes a quantitative approach measuring changes in service utilization, costs, clinical outcomes and quality of care using routine primary and secondary data sources. It also contains a qualitative component, involving observations, interviews and focus groups with patients and professionals, to understand participant experiences and to understand the pilot within the national policy context. This study considers the complexity of evaluating a large, multi-organisational intervention in a changing healthcare economy. We locate the evaluation within the theory of evaluation of complex interventions. We present the specific challenges faced by evaluating an intervention of this sort, and the responses made to mitigate against them. We hope this broad, dynamic and responsive evaluation will allow us to clarify the contribution of the pilot, and provide a potential model for evaluation of other similar interventions. Because of the priority given to the integrated agenda by governments internationally, the need to develop and improve strong evaluation methodologies remains strikingly important. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Gnosall memory clinic: the basics http://www.gnosallsurgery.co.uk/website/M83070/files/Gnosall_Memory_Clinic__The_Basics_April_2013.pdf High quality lifelong care The Uniting Care Partnership: an NHS partnership responsible for providing older people’s healthcare and adult community services across Cambridgeshire and Peterborough http://www.unitingcare.co.uk/ ‘If vanguards work the return on investment is to the wider NHS.’ / Read, Claire How vanguard trusts are working at Salford Royal, Northumbria and Morecambe Bay http://www.hsj.co.uk/hospitaltransformation/if-vanguards-work-the-return-on-investment-is-tothe-wider-nhs/5085295.article#.VXABms-6eUk Integrated Care and Support Pioneer Programme Annual Report 2014 – NHS England http://www.local.gov.uk/documents/10180/6927502/Integrated+Care+Pioneer+Programme+Annua l+Report+2014/76d562c3-4f7d-4169-91bc-69f7a9be481c Integrated care pilots launched. Citation: GP: General Practitioner, 10 April 2009, vol./is. /(3-), 02688417 Language: English Abstract: The article announces the launch of integrated care organisations in Great Britain. It is expected that the 16 pilot projects will cost £4 million and will involve collaborations between general practitioner (GP) practices, trusts, private providers, social services and charities for local health needs. It points out that most of their schemes is aimed at improving services coordination for the elderly and chronically ill. Publication Type: Periodical Source: HEALTH BUSINESS ELITE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in GP: General Practitioner Integrated care pioneer programme: annual report 2014 / NHS England (see attached file) Integrated care scheme for older people will roll out across England. Citation: BMJ (Clinical research ed.), Jan 2015, vol. 350, p. h2157. (2015) Author(s): O'Dowd, Adrian Source: Medline Integrated care pilot programme: ensuring people with dementia receive joined up care Citation: Nursing times, March 2010, vol./is. 106/10(12-14), 0954-7762 (2010 Mar 16-22) Author(s): Jones K. Language: English Abstract: The Department of Health's integrated care pilots, announced in April 2009, aim to transform the way people experience health and social care. A multidisciplinary team in Bournemouth and Poole has set up a nurse led project focusing on memory loss and dementia in older people. This article outlines the aims, elements, challenges and benefits of working as part of a multidisciplinary team, from a nursing perspective. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available in NURSING TIMES at JET Library, Leighton Integrating community services for patients with multiple long-term conditions and the frail elderly / Balmer, Jan (Mid-Nottinghamshire Integrated Care Transformation Programme) (see attached file) New care models – vanguard sites – NHS England web sites A list of the vanguard sites and the projects they are working on http://www.england.nhs.uk/ourwork/futurenhs/5yfv-ch3/new-care-models/ Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust: clinical strategy 2012/13-2015/6 (2014) (see attached file) Pages 20-21 of the strategy talk about integrated care pathways Solent NHS Trust: integrated business plan (see attached file) Page 10-12 talk about developing integrated care Summary of integrated care projects: Bolton, Salford and Trafford (2013) (see attached file) The North West London Integrated Care Pilot: Innovative strategies to improve care coordination for older adults and people with diabetes Citation: Journal of Ambulatory Care Management, July 2012, vol./is. 35/3(216-225), 0148-9917 (July-September 2012) Author(s): Harris M., Greaves F., Patterson S., Jones J., Pappas Y., Majeed A., Car J. Language: English Abstract: The North West London Integrated Care Pilot (ICP) was launched in June 2011 and brings together more than 100 general practices, 2 acute care trusts, 5 primary care trusts, 2 mental health care trusts, 3 community health trusts, 5 local authorities, and 2 voluntary sector organizations (Age UK and Diabetes UK) to improve the coordination of care for a pilot population of 550 000 people. Specifically, the ICP serves people older than 75 years and those with diabetes. Although still in the early stages of implementation, the ICP has already received national awards for its innovations in design and delivery. This article critically describes the ICP objectives, facilitating processes, and planned impact as well as the organizational and financial challenges that policy makers are facing in the implementation of the pilot program. Copyright © 2012 Wolters Kluwer Health Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Transforming the care of the frail older person / The Community Programme (various bodies in the East Midlands) (see attached file) Whittington Health NHS Trust: 13/14 annual report (see attached file) Whittington Health is one of the 14 integrated-care pioneers chosen by NHS England – see page 10 of this document The Policy Background Building the house – the House of Care toolkit The House of Care toolkit describes four key, interdependent components that, if implemented together, will achieve patient-centred, co-ordinated service for people living with long-term conditions and their carers http://www.nhsiq.nhs.uk/improvement-programmes/long-term-conditions-and-integratedcare/long-term-conditions-improvement-programme/house-of-care-toolkit.aspx Disability, dementia and frailty in later life – mid-life approaches to prevention NICE guideline on preventing disability and dementia as people get older http://www.nice.org.uk/Guidance/GID-PHG64/Documents Fit for frailty: consensus best practice guidance for the care of older people living with frailty in community and outpatient settings / British Geriatrics Society (2014) (see attached file) Integration: local-government and health leaders prefer a whole-systems approach / Dalton, Rachel http://www.hsj.co.uk/resource-centre/supplements/integration-local-government-and-healthleaders-prefer-a-whole-system-approach/5086572.article#.VXbO88-6eUk Making our health and care systems fit for an ageing population / Oliver, David, Foot, Catherine and Humphries, Richard (King’s Fund, 2014) (see attached file) Person centred care made simple: what everyone should know about personcentred care. Quick Guide. Citation: Health Foundation, October 2014. Author(s): Health Foundation. Full text: http://personcentredcare.health.org.uk/sites/default/files/resources/personcentred_care_made_simple_1.pdf Safe, compassionate care for frail older people using an integrated care pathway: practical guidance for commissioners, providers and nursing, medical and allied health professional leaders – NHS England, South, Report (see attached file) http://www.england.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/safe-comp-care.pdf Think frailty: improving the identification and management of frailty – a case study report of innovation on four acute sites in NHS Scotland / NHS Scotland (2014) (see attached file) Towards whole person care. Citation: Institute for Public Policy Research, December 2013. Author(s): Bickerstaffe, S. Full text: http://www.ippr.org/assets/media/images/media/files/publication/2013/11/wholeperson-care_Dec2013_11518.pdf?noredirect=1 European Initiatives A Slovenian model of integrated care for older people can offer solutions for NHS services. Citation: Nursing times, Jan 2009, vol. 105, no. 49-50, p. 10-12, 0954-7762 (2009 Dec 15-2010 Jan 11) Author(s): Jones, Helen, Wilding, Steve Abstract: The population in Britain is ageing and creating a burden on healthcare that will require the NHS and social care to deliver innovative strategies. This article outlines a visit to Slovenia to view a model of care that fits in well with the Department of Health's integrated care approach to the care of older people and those with long term conditions. Source: Medline Full Text: Available in NURSING TIMES at JET Library, Leighton Diagnostic study, design and implementation of an integrated model of care in France: a bottom-up process with continuous leadership. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2010, vol. 10, p. e034. (2010) Author(s): de Stampa, Matthieu, Vedel, Isabelle, Mauriat, Claire, Bagaragaza, Emmanuel, Routelous, Christelle, Bergman, Howard, Lapointe, Liette, Cassou, Bernard, Ankri, Joel, Henrard, Jean-Claude Abstract: Sustaining integrated care is difficult, in large part because of problems encountered securing the participation of health care and social service professionals and, in particular, general practitioners (GPs). To present an innovative bottom-up and pragmatic strategy used to implement a new integrated care model in France for community-dwelling elderly people with complex needs. In the first step, a diagnostic study was conducted with face-to-face interviews to gather data on current practices from a sample of health and social stakeholders working with elderly people. In the second step, an integrated care model called Coordination Personnes Agées (COPA) was designed by the same major stakeholders in order to define its detailed characteristics based on the local context. In the third step, the model was implemented in two phases: adoption and maintenance. This strategy was carried out by a continuous and flexible leadership throughout the process, initially with a mixed leadership (clinician and researcher) followed by a double one (clinician and managers of services) in the implementation phase. The implementation of this bottom-up and pragmatic strategy relied on establishing a collaborative dynamic among health and social stakeholders. This enhanced their involvement throughout the implementation phase, particularly among the GPs, and allowed them to support the change practices and services arrangements. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Health and social care in aging population: an integrated care institution for the elderly in Greece. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2003, vol. 3, p. e04. (2003) Author(s): Daniilidou, Natasa V, Economou, Charalabos, Zavras, Dimitrios, Kyriopoulos, John, Georgoussi, Eugenia Abstract: To describe the nature of the services actually offered to the elderly in Greece by an institution of integrated care, as opposed to those that should be offered according to the relevant law, and to investigate the factors influencing the supply of those services. By the year 2020 about 20 million people will be aged 80 and over in the European Union. People of third age consist 16.9% of the total Greek population. Population aging has major implications on health services, employment and society as a whole. "Open Care Centres for the Elderly" (KAPI) is a rapidly developing and expanding institution providing integrated care for the elderly. A questionnaire to be completed by the staff was sent to all 370 KAPI. Response rate reached 66%. For the analysis of the data multiple logistic regression analysis was performed using SPSS 10.0. Both medical and social care is provided by the KAPI to the elderly with different magnitude all over the country. Factors such as number of members, medical, paramedical and non-medical staff and fund availability in the KAPI mainly influence the supply of services. Integrated care services are offered by the KAPI. However, more steps need to be taken towards the direction of other European countries' integrated care schemes, in order to improve both quality and quantity of the services provided. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Implementing the chronic care model for frail older adults in the Netherlands: study protocol of ACT (frail older adults: care in transition) BMC Geriatr. 2012; 12: 19. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3464922/ Background Care for older adults is facing a number of challenges: health problems are not consistently identified at a timely stage, older adults report a lack of autonomy in their care process, and care systems are often confronted with the need for better coordination between health care professionals. We aim to address these challenges by introducing the geriatric care model, based on the chronic care model, and to evaluate its effects on the quality of life of community-dwelling frail older adults. Methods/design In a 2-year stepped-wedge cluster randomised clinical trial with 6-monthly measurements, the chronic care model will be compared with usual care. The trial will be carried out among 35 primary care practices in two regions in the Netherlands. Per region, practices will be randomly allocated to four allocation arms designating the starting point of the intervention. Participants: 1200 community-dwelling older adults aged 65 or over and their primary informal caregivers. Primary care physicians will identify frail individuals based on a composite definition of frailty and a polypharmacy criterion. Final inclusion criterion: scoring 3 or more on a disability case-finding tool. Intervention: Every 6 months patients will receive a geriatric in-home assessment by a practice nurse, followed by a tailored care plan. Expert teams will manage and train practice nurses. Patients with complex care needs will be reviewed in interdisciplinary consultations. Evaluation: We will perform an effect evaluation, an economic evaluation, and a process evaluation. Primary outcome is quality of life as measured with the Short Form-12 questionnaire. Effect analyses will be based on the “intention-totreat” principle, using multilevel regression analysis. Cost measurements will be administered continually during the study period. A cost-effectiveness analysis and cost-utility analysis will be conducted comparing mean total costs to functional status, care needs and QALYs. We will investigate the level of implementation, barriers and facilitators to successful implementation and the extent to which the intervention manages to achieve the transition necessary to overcome challenges in elderly care. Discussion This is one of the first studies assessing the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and implementation process of the chronic care model for frail community-dwelling older adults. Keywords: Chronic care model, Frailty, Elderly, Primary care, Stepped wedge cluster randomised controlled clinical trial Integrated care for the elderly: the background and effects of the reform of Swedish care of the elderly. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2000, vol. 1, p. e01. (2000) Author(s): Andersson, G, Karlberg, I Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Integrated care for older people in Europe-latest trends and perceptions. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2012, vol. 12, p. e7. (2012 Jan-Mar) Author(s): Leichsenring, Kai Abstract: As a researcher and consultant I have coordinated local pilots and European research projects to analyse and improve long-term care for older people by better integrating health and social care systems. One of my conclusions from the wide range of initiatives that have been taken over the past two decades in Europe has been the need to treat long-term care as a system in its own right. Long-term care systems require a discernable identity; specific policies, structures, processes and pathways; and the leadership and resources that can underpin expectations, drive performance and achieve better outcomes for people that are living with (and working for those with) long-term care needs. Progress in developing LTC systems can be identified today in all European countries. Integrated care solutions at the interface between health and social care, and between formal and informal care, have appeared. These have been achieved partly by means of (slow) political reforms, partly as a response to market-oriented governance, and in many cases through pioneering community and civil society initiatives. It will depend on such initiatives, and their ability to convince both citizens and policy-makers, whether new societal approaches to longterm care are created that meet the demands of ageing societies. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Integrated care for vulnerable older people in Denmark Citation: HealthcarePapers, 2009, vol./is. 10/1(29-33; discussion 79-3383), 1488-917X (2009) Author(s): Hansen E.B. Language: English Abstract: This paper focuses on community-based services for vulnerable older people in Denmark. The main characteristics of the Danish case of integrated care are introduced, and the principles in the provision of community-based services and the overall organization and responsibility of these services are analyzed. Furthermore, the principles and the incentives behind the development of integrated care for older people in Denmark are discussed. On the basis of the Danish experience, the paper ends with a discussion of important characteristics of community care for vulnerable and disabled older people and significant factors in the process of developing integrated community care. Publication Type: Journal: Article Organizing integrated care for older persons: strategies in Sweden during the past decade. Citation: Journal of health organization and management, Jan 2015, vol. 29, no. 1, p. 128-151, 14777266 (2015) Author(s): Berglund, Helene, Blomberg, Staffan, Dunér, Anna, Kjellgren, Karin Abstract: Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to describe and analyse ways of organizing integrated care for older persons in Sweden during the past decade. Design/methodology/approach - The data consist of 62 cases of development work, described in official reports. A meta-analysis of cases was performed, including content analysis of each case. A theoretical framework comprising different forms of integration (co-ordination, contracting, co-operation and collaboration) was applied. Findings - Co-operation was common and collaboration, including multiprofessional teamwork, was rare in the cases. Contracting can be questioned as being a form of integration, and the introduction of consumer choice models appeared problematic in inter-organization integration. Goals stated in the cases concerned steering and designing care, rather than outcome specifications for older persons. Explicit goals to improve integration in itself could imply that the organizations adapt to strong normative expectations in society. Trends over the decade comprised development of local health care systems, introduction of consumer choice models and contracting out. Research limitations/implications - Most cases were projects, but others comprised evaluations of regular organization of integrated care. These evaluations were often written normatively, but constituted the conditions for practice and were important study contributions. Practical implications - Guiding clinical practice to be aware of importance of setting follow-up goals. Social implications - Awareness of the risk that special funds may impede sustainable strategies development. Originality/value - A theoretical framework of forms of integration was applied to several different strategies, which had been carried out mostly in practice. The study contributes to understanding of how different strategies have been developed and applied to organize integrated care, and highlights some relationships between integration theory and practice. Source: Medline Ten years of integrated care for the older in France. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2011, vol. 11, p. e141. (January 2011) Author(s): Somme, Dominique, de Stampa, Matthieu Abstract: This paper analyzes progress made toward the integration of the French health care system for the older and chronically ill population. Over the last 10 years, the French health care system has been principally influenced by two competing linkage models that failed to integrate social and health care services: local information and coordination centers, governed by the social field, and the gerontological health networks governed by the health field. In response to this fragmentation, Homes for the Integration and Autonomy for Alzheimer patients (MAIAs) is currently being implemented at experimental sites in the French national Alzheimer plan, using an evidencebased model of integrated care. In addition, the state's reforms recently created regional health agencies (ARSs) by merging seven strategic institutions to manage the overall delivery of care. The French health care system is moving from a linkage-based model to a more integrated care system. We draw some early lessons from these changes, including the importance of national leadership and governance and a change management strategy that uses both top-down and bottom-up approaches to implement these reforms. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care The 2008-2012 French Alzheimer plan: a unique opportunity for improving integrated care for dementia. Citation: Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD, Jan 2013, vol. 34, no. 1, p. 307-314 (2013) Author(s): Pimouguet, Clément, Bassi, Valérie, Somme, Dominique, Lavallart, Benoit, Helmer, Catherine, Dartigues, Jean François Abstract: The 2008-2012 French Alzheimer plan has proposed measures to improve care for dementia patients in a more personalized and graduate approach owing to patients and caregivers needs. A key measure of the plan is the nationwide implementation of the MAIA (French acronym for Maison pour l'Autonomie et l'Intégration des malades d'Alzheimer). The main goal is to implement a process of integration through a network of partners involved in elderly care, assistance, or support. The MAIA model comprises tools and mechanisms necessary to improve the integrated care process; in particular, case management for elderly in complex situations. The purpose of this paper is to describe the main measures from the national plan that aim to improve care for dementia patients with an emphasis on the MAIA measure. We summarize initial results of case management activity in one MAIA in the South West of France and we present two vignettes of cases benefiting from case management in order to demonstrate the nature of intervention. The French Alzheimer plan has promoted several non-pharmacological strategies for dementia patients. Implementation of both integrated care and case management represent a challenging perspective for the elderly and health professionals. Source: Medline The first general practitioner hospital in The Netherlands: Towards a new form of integrated care? Citation: Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, March 2004, vol./is. 22/1(38-43), 0281-3432 (March 2004) Author(s): Van Charante E.M., Hartman E., Yzermans J., Voogt E., Klazinga N., Bindels P. Language: English Abstract: Objective - To describe the types of patients admitted to the first Dutch general practitioner (GP) hospital, their health-related quality of life and its substitute function. Design - A prospective observational study. Setting - The remaining 20-bed ward of a former district general hospital west of Amsterdam; a region with 62000 inhabitants and 26 GPs. Subjects - All patients admitted during the 12 months between 1 June 1999 and 1 June 2000. Main outcome measures Patients' health-related quality of life (Medical Outcome Study 36-item Short Form Health Survey, Groningen Activities Restriction Scale), GPs assessments of severity of illness (DUSOI/WONCA Severity of Illness Checklist) and alternative modes of care. Results - In total, 218 admissions were recorded divided into 3 bed categories: GP beds (n = 131), rehabilitation beds (n = 62) and nursing home beds (n = 25). The mean age of all patients was 76 years. Main reasons for admission were immobilization due to trauma at home (GP beds), rehabilitation from surgery (rehabilitation beds) and stroke (nursing home beds). Overall, patients showed a poor health-related quality of life on admission. If the GP beds had not been available, the GPs estimated that the admissions would have been almost equally divided among home care, nursing home and hospital care. The severity of the diagnosis on admission of the 'hospital-care group' appeared to be significantly higher than the other care groups. Conclusion - The GP hospital appears to provide a valuable alternative to home care, nursing home care and hospital care, especially for elderly patients with a poor health-related quality of life who are in need of short medical and nursing care. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care Available from Free Access Content in Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care Available from EBSCOhost in Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care Academic Research 5-year Medicaid cost savings from integrating home and community based services with a house-call practice: Elder partnership for all-inclusive care (EPAC) Citation: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, April 2011, vol./is. 59/(S6), 0002-8614 (April 2011) Author(s): Kinosian B., Yudin J., Myers S., Danish A., Touzell S., Horner S., Bowman J., Gallahger J., O'Donnell L., Forciea M. Language: English Abstract: Background: Multidisciplinary housecall practices have been shown to decrease hospital (Medicare-covered) costs by 25-30%. Impact on Medicaid covered services (HCBS and nursing home care) are unclear, although states have pursued integrated care options with Special Needs Plans and PACE to achieve such savings. We have operated an inter-agency, interdisciplinary team, integrating the Area Agency on Aging (Philadelphia Corporation on Aging) provided waiver services with an Independence-at-Home like housecall practice. Methods: We assembled a 2004 prevalence cohort with accrual, and followed them for 5 years. We identified controls, matched by age, gender, PCA program, zip code, and long term care assessment risk score elements. We identified death, NH residence, and Medicaid costs (total, HCBS, NH) for both groups, and calculated Kaplan- Meier survival. Results: There were 4360 member-months of observation for the 92 EPAC cohort members; and 6910 member-months of observation for the 216 Waiver controls. EPAC consumers had 256 months in long-term institutional care (5.7%), compared to 1726 months for wavier controls (24.9%). Mean survival was 47 months, with 44.3 months in the community for EPAC, and 31.9 months (24.2 in community) for waiver controls. Mean Medicaid costs were $1720 pmpm ($1448 HCBS/$271 NH)for EPAC and $2257 ($1084 HCBS/$1172 NH) for Waiver. Total 5-year Medicaid costs were $7.5M for EPAC, and $9.8M for equivalent member-months in Waiver, and $6.7M for 92 similar Waiver consumers,with an incremental cost/year of community survival of $190, due to the longer survival of EPAC members. Conclusion: Integratingmedical care through a IAH-type housecall practice with HCBS provided by a AAA can reduce Medicaid costs by 23%, driven by a 76% reduction in nursing home months. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Journal of the American Geriatrics Society A cost-effectiveness study of a patient-centred integrated care pathway Citation: Journal of Advanced Nursing, August 2009, vol./is. 65/8(1626-1635), 0309-2402;1365-2648 (August 2009) Author(s): Olsson L.-E., Hansson E., Ekman I., Karlsson J. Language: English Abstract: Title. A cost-effectiveness study of a patient-centred integrated care pathway. Aim. The aim of the study was to compare costs and consequences for an integrated care pathway intervention group with those of a usual care group for patients admitted with hip fracture. Background. Rehabilitation for patients with hip fracture consists of training in hospital and/or in a rehabilitation unit, and on their own at home with assistance from community care staff. It is important for hospitals to provide methods of care that can safeguard these older patients' physical function and potential for independent living. Methods. A consecutive sample of 112 independently living participants, aged 65 years or older and admitted to hospital with a hip fracture, were included in the study. Data were collected over an 18-month period in 2003-2005. A cost-effectiveness analysis was performed to compare an integrated care pathway intervention (treatment A) with usual care (treatment B). Results. There was a 40% reduction for each participant in the average total cost of treatment A of 9685 vs. 15,984 for treatment B. Moreover, clinical effectiveness was much improved. The cost-effectiveness ratio for treatment A was 14,840 vs. 31,908 for treatment B. In addition, 75% of the participants in treatment A were successfully rehabilitated vs. 55% in treatment B. Conclusions. The recovery trajectory for hip fracture surgery may be shortened if nurses pay more attention to the individual patient's resources and motivation for rehabilitation. The application of an integrated care pathway with individualized care appears to enhance both rehabilitation outcomes and cost-effectiveness. © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Journal of Advanced Nursing A literature review to explore integrated care for older people. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2005, vol. 5, p. e17. (2005) Author(s): Reed, Jan, Cook, Glenda, Childs, Sue, McCormack, Brendan Abstract: This paper reports on some of the findings of a literature review commissioned to explore integrated care for older people. The process of revising included finding and selecting literature from multidisciplinary sources, and encompassed both published papers and 'grey' literature, i.e. material which had not been reviewed for publication. The study found that thinking has moved on from a focus on the problems of accessing services to exploring ways in which they may function in an integrated way. The study shows how thinking on integrated care for older people has developed, and knowledge of micro, mezzo and macro strategies is now more available. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care A novel model of integrated care for the elderly: COPA, coordination of professional care for the elderly Citation: Aging Clinical and Experimental Research, December 2009, vol./is. 21/6(414-423), 15940667;1720-8319 (December 2009) Author(s): Vedel I., De Stampa M., Bergman H., Ankri J., Cassou B., Mauriat C., Blanchard F., Bagaragaza E., Lapointe L. Language: English Abstract: Despite strong evidence for the efficacy of integrated systems, securing the participation of health professionals, particularly primary care physicians (PCPs), has proven difficult. Novel approaches are needed to resolve these problems. We developed a model - COPA - that is based on scientific evidence and an original design process in which health professionals, including PCPs, and managers participated actively. COPA targets very frail community-dwelling elders recruited through their PCP. It was designed to provide a better fit between the services provided and the needs of the elderly in order to reduce excess healthcare use, including unnecessary emergency room (ER) visits and hospitalizations, and prevent inappropriate long-term nursing home placements. The model's originality lies in: 1) having reinforced the role played by the PCP, which includes patient recruitment and care plan development; 2) having integrated health professionals into a multidisciplinary primary care team that includes case managers who collaborate closely with the PCP to perform a geriatric assessment (InterRAI MDS-HC) and implement care management programs; and 3) having integrated primary medical care and specialized care by introducing geriatricians into the community to see patients in their homes and organize direct hospitalizations while maintaining the PCP responsibility for medical decisions. Since COPA is currently the subject of both a quasi-ex perimental study and a qualitative study, we are also providing preliminary findings. These findings suggest that the model is feasible and well accepted by PCPs and patients. Moreover, our results indicate that the level of service utilization in COPA was less than what is reported at the national level, without any compromises in quality of care. ©2009, Editrice Kurtis. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE A system of integrated care for older persons with disabilities in Canada: Results from a randomized controlled trial Citation: Journals of Gerontology - Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, April 2006, vol./is. 61/4(367-373), 1079-5006 (April 2006) Author(s): Beland F., Bergman H., Lebel P., Clarfield A.M., Tousignant P., Contandriopoulos A.-P., Dallaire L. Language: English Abstract: Background. Care for elderly persons with disabilities is usually characterized by fragmentation, often leading to more intrusive and expensive forms of care such as hospitalization and institutionalization. There has been increasing interest in the ability of integrated models to improve health, satisfaction, and service utilization outcomes. Methods. A program of integrated care for vulnerable community-dwelling elderly persons (SIPA [French acronym for System of Integrated Care for Older Persons]) was compared to usual care with a randomized control trial. SIPA offered community-based care with local agencies responsible for the full range and coordination of community and institutional (acute and long-term) health and social services. Primary outcomes were utilization and public costs of institutional and community care. Secondary outcomes included health status, satisfaction with care, caregiver burden, and out-of-pocket expenses. Results. Accessibility was increased for health and social home care with increased intensification of home health care. There was a 50% reduction in hospital alternate level inpatient stays ("bed blockers") but no significant differences in utilization and costs of emergency department, hospital acute inpatient, and nursing home stays. For all study participants, average community costs per person were C$3390 higher in the SIPA group but institutional costs were C$3770 lower with, as hypothesized, no difference in total overall costs per person in the two groups. Satisfaction was increased for SIPA caregivers with no increase in caregiver burden or out-of-pocket costs. As expected, there was no difference in health outcomes. Conclusions. Integrated systems appear to be feasible and have the potential to reduce hospital and nursing home utilization without increasing costs. Copyright 2006 by The Gerontological Society of America. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences & Medical Sciences A systematic review of different models of home and community care services for older persons. Citation: BMC health services research, Jan 2011, vol. 11, p. 93. (2011) Author(s): Low, Lee-Fay, Yap, Melvyn, Brodaty, Henry Abstract: Costs and consumer preference have led to a shift from the long-term institutional care of aged older people to home and community based care. The aim of this review is to evaluate the outcomes of case managed, integrated or consumer directed home and community care services for older persons, including those with dementia. A systematic review was conducted of non-medical home and community care services for frail older persons. MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, AgeLine, Scopus and PubMed were searched from 1994 to May 2009. Two researchers independently reviewed search results. Thirty five papers were included in this review. Evidence from randomized controlled trials showed that case management improves function and appropriate use of medications, increases use of community services and reduces nursing home admission. Evidence, mostly from non-randomized trials, showed that integrated care increases service use; randomized trials reported that integrated care does not improve clinical outcomes. The lowest quality evidence was for consumer directed care which appears to increase satisfaction with care and community service use but has little effect on clinical outcomes. Studies were heterogeneous in methodology and results were not consistent. The outcomes of each model of care differ and correspond to the model's focus. Combining key elements of all three models may maximize outcomes. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in BMC Health Services Research Available from ProQuest in BMC Health Services Research Available from National Library of Medicine in BMC Health Services Research Available from BioMed Central in BMC Health Services Research A systematic review of integrated working between care homes and health care services Citation: BMC health services research, 2011, vol./is. 11/(320), 1472-6963 (2011) Author(s): Davies S.L., Goodman C., Bunn F., Victor C., Dickinson A., Iliffe S., Gage H., Martin W., Froggatt K. Language: English Abstract: In the UK there are almost three times as many beds in care homes as in National Health Service (NHS) hospitals. Care homes rely on primary health care for access to medical care and specialist services. Repeated policy documents and government reviews register concern about how health care works with independent providers, and the need to increase the equity, continuity and quality of medical care for care homes. Despite multiple initiatives, it is not known if some approaches to service delivery are more effective in promoting integrated working between the NHS and care homes. This study aims to evaluate the different integrated approaches to health care services supporting older people in care homes, and identify barriers and facilitators to integrated working. A systematic review was conducted using Medline (PubMed), CINAHL, BNI, EMBASE, PsycInfo, DH Data, Kings Fund, Web of Science (WoS incl. SCI, SSCI, HCI) and the Cochrane Library incl. DARE. Studies were included if they evaluated the effectiveness of integrated working between primary health care professionals and care homes, or identified barriers and facilitators to integrated working. Studies were quality assessed; data was extracted on health, service use, cost and process related outcomes. A modified narrative synthesis approach was used to compare and contrast integration using the principles of framework analysis. Seventeen studies were included; 10 quantitative studies, two process evaluations, one mixed methods study and four qualitative. The majority were carried out in nursing homes. They were characterised by heterogeneity of topic, interventions, methodology and outcomes. Most quantitative studies reported limited effects of the intervention; there was insufficient information to evaluate cost. Facilitators to integrated working included care home managers' support and protected time for staff training. Studies with the potential for integrated working were longer in duration. Despite evidence about what inhibits and facilitates integrated working there was limited evidence about what the outcomes of different approaches to integrated care between health service and care homes might be. The majority of studies only achieved integrated working at the patient level of care and the focus on health service defined problems and outcome measures did not incorporate the priorities of residents or acknowledge the skills of care home staff. There is a need for more research to understand how integrated working is achieved and to test the effect of different approaches on cost, staff satisfaction and resident outcomes. Publication Type: Journal: Review Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in BMC Health Services Research Available from ProQuest in BMC Health Services Research Available from National Library of Medicine in BMC Health Services Research Available from BioMed Central in BMC Health Services Research Accountable care organisations in the United Sates and England: testing, evaluating and learning what works / Stephen Shortell … et al (King’s Fund, 2014) (see attached file) Acute hospitals and integrated care: from hospitals to health systems. Citation: King’s Fund, March 2015. Author(s): Naylor, C et al. Full text: http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/sites/files/kf/field/field_publication_file/acute-hospitalsand-integrated-care-march-2015.pdf An integrated care pathway project Citation: Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, May 2014, vol./is. 57/(e400), 1877-0657 (May 2014) Author(s): Enjalbert M., Benoit E., Ducassy B., Anuth C., Barnier-Figue G. Language: English Abstract: Goal.- The need to streamline care pathways led us to build up an integrated project shared by Perpignan Hospital and different PRM facilities. Methods.- The approach has been achieved in three steps: grouping of threePRM facilities and two medicosocial settings, creation of a union of associations with a combination of psychiatric and geriatric institutions and, finally, setting up a project with the Perpignan Hospital. Results.- This project thus integrated the pooling of PRM technical platforms of the hospital centre (including geriatric network) and of the partner facilities. This provided a fluid pathway between acute care and post-acute and rehabilitation care. It also contributed to develop the downstream networks: nursing care, homecare, long lasting care and nursing homes. Conclusions.- The efficiency of care management relies on the development of pathways from acute care, to post-acute care and rehabilitation, social and medical downstream networks. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine An integrated care program for hip fracture in Singapore Citation: Osteoporosis International, December 2013, vol./is. 24/(S588), 0937-941X (December 2013) Author(s): Chan W., Rajamoney G.N., Ramason R., Chua S., Azellarasi J., Koo W. Language: English Abstract: Aims: To improve the care and outcomes of hip fracture patients using an integrated model of care of these patients from acute care at Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore to the inpatient rehabilitation facilities and the community rehabilitation centres. Methods: The Integrated Hip Fracture Care Workgroup at Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH), Singapore was formed in 2010 to plan and implement a new program that addresses the needs of these patients from acute care to inpatient rehabilitation and community care. The proposal for The Integrated Hip Fracture Care Program was supported by the Ministry of Health, Singapore, with funding from Health Services Development Program since 2011. Key Performance Indicators (KPI) were conceptualised based on various evidence-based clinical practice guidelines around the world, measuring clinical processes and patient outcomes of the program such as time from admission to dedicated orthopaedic ward, time to surgery, complication rates, functional outcome and mortality. Recruitment of patients age 60 years or older admitted to TTSH with acute hip fractures to the program commenced in October 2011. All patients are managed by the orthopaedic surgeons and well supported by a team of orthogeriatricians, other specialists and a multidisciplinary team of allied health professionals. Appropriate patients are referred to inpatient rehabilitation facilities and/or day rehabiltation centres. Care is coordinated by 3 integrated care managers based in TTSH and the patients are followed up for 1 year fromadmission. Results: About 560 patients were admitted to the program in the first year, with 1-year follow-up data for the first 9 months available for analysis.We report the outcomes and challenges we face in the first 2 years of the program, and future plans to enhance the effectiveness of the program. Conclusions: The Integrated Hip Fracture Care Program at TTSH demonstrates the challenges and opportunities in integrating care of patients with significant impairments and disabilities. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Osteoporosis International Available from ProQuest in Osteoporosis International Attitudes towards integrated care pathways in the UK NHS: A pilot study in one UK NHS trust Citation: Journal of Integrated Care Pathways, April 2005, vol./is. 9/1(13-20), 1473-2297 (April 2005) Author(s): Parker D., Claridge T., Cook G. Language: English Abstract: Background: Integrated care pathways (ICPs) offer an increasingly common approach to the standardization and integration of health-care practice in hospitals. The questionnaire study reported here was the final phase in a systematic investigation of the attitudes of health-care professionals towards ICPs in one acute UK NHS Trust. Method: A total of 314 health-care professionals working in a medium-sized NHS hospital in the UK completed a survey questionnaire, representing 34% of those approached. Results: Ten dimensions of attitude to ICPs were uncovered. Junior staff had less positive attitudes than senior staff on all dimensions. Across all professional groups (doctors, nurses, professions allied to medicine), staff were more unhappy with the idea of ICPs than with the evidence they are based on or the quality of the documentation itself. Conclusions: The investigation provided information about how widespread the dislike of ICPs was in the Trust and details of what was giving rise to staff unease. This enabled the authors to make recommendations to the Trust about the future development and implementation of ICPs in the Trust. The most central of these was that investing time and effort in changing the presentation of ICPs will not meet with success until more fundamental aspects of staff unease have been addressed. Overall, respondents from this Trust felt uneasy about ICPs because they do not like the idea of being told what to do. Therefore, if the ICP development programme is to continue at this hospital and be successful, the hearts and minds of those expected to use ICPs must be won over. © The Royal Society of Medicine Press 2005. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Better care for frail older people: working differently to improve care - Deloitte http://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/de/Documents/life-sciences-health-care/LSHCbetter-care-for-frail-older-people-14.pdf Building bonds with nursing homes / Butcher, Lola Hospitals and Health Networks May 2015 (see attached file) Care for Canada's frail elderly population: Fragmentation or integration? CMAJ. 1997 Oct 15; 157(8): 1116–1121. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1228270/ Budget constraints, technological advances and a growing elderly population have resulted in major reforms in health care systems across Canada. This has led to fewer and smaller acute care hospitals and increasing pressure on the primary care and continuing care networks. The present system of care for the frail elderly, who are particularly vulnerable, is characterized by fragmentation of services, negative incentives and the absence of accountability. This is turn leads to the inappropriate and costly use of health and social services, particularly in acute care hospitals and long-term care institutions. Canada needs to develop a publicly managed community-based system of primary care to provide integrated care for the frail elderly. The authors describe such a model, which would have clinical and financial responsibility for the full range of health and social services required by this population. This model would represent a major challenge and change for the existing system. Demonstration projects are needed to evaluate its cost-effectiveness and address issues raised by its introduction. Caregiver satisfaction with support services: influence of different types of services. Citation: Journal of aging and health, Feb 2006, vol. 18, no. 1, p. 3-27, 0898-2643 (February 2006) Author(s): Savard, Jacinthe, Leduc, Nicole, Lebel, Paule, Beland, Francois, Bergman, Howard Abstract: This article examines factors influencing satisfaction with support services of caregivers of frail older adults and determines what types of support services are associated with greater satisfaction, controlling for frail individual and caregiver characteristics. The study includes 291 frail older adults-caregiver dyads from Montreal in which caregivers receive support services. The Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-8 is used to measure caregiver satisfaction with these services. Caregivers receiving information, advice, or emotional support, and those caring for seniors receiving integrated care are more likely to be highly satisfied. Other factors increasing satisfaction are fewer number of health problems of frail individuals, caregiver being the spouse of the frail person, as well as greater caregiver perceived health, autonomy in instrumental activities of daily living, and available social support. The results support the importance of integrated care for frail seniors and informational services for their caregivers. Source: Medline Care transitions for frail, older people from acute hospital wards within an integrated care system in England: a qualitative case study / Lesley Baillie … [et al] International Journal of Integrated Care 14 (January-March 2014) http://www.ijic.org/index.php/ijic/article/view/1175/2382 Case management for at-risk elderly patients in the English integrated care pilots: observational study of staff and patient experience and secondary care utilisation. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jul 2012, vol. 12, p. e130. (2012 Jul-Sep) Author(s): Roland, Martin, Lewis, Richard, Steventon, Adam, Abel, Gary, Adams, John, Bardsley, Martin, Brereton, Laura, Chitnis, Xavier, Conklin, Annalijn, Staetsky, Laura, Tunkel, Sarah, Ling, Tom Abstract: In 2009, the English Department of Health appointed 16 integrated care pilots which aimed to provide better integrated care. We report the quantitative results from a multi-method evaluation of six of the demonstration projects which used risk profiling tools to identify older people at risk of emergency hospital admission, combined with intensive case management for people identified as at risk. The interventions focused mainly on delivery system redesign and improved clinical information systems, two key elements of Wagner's Chronic Care Model. Questionnaires to staff and patients. Difference-in-differences analysis of secondary care utilisation using data on 3646 patients and 17,311 matched controls, and changes in overall secondary care utilisation. Most staff thought that care for their patients had improved. More patients reported having a care plan but they found it significantly harder to see a doctor or nurse of their choice and felt less involved in decisions about their care. Case management interventions were associated with a 9% increase in emergency admissions. We found some evidence of imbalance between cases and controls which could have biased this estimate, but simulations of the possible effect of unobserved confounders showed that it was very unlikely that the sites achieved their goal of reducing emergency admissions. However, we found significant reductions of 21% and 22% in elective admissions and outpatient attendance in the six months following an intervention, and overall inpatient and outpatient costs were significantly reduced by 9% during this period. Area level analyses of whole practice populations suggested that overall outpatient attendances were significantly reduced by 5% two years after the start of the case management schemes. Case management may result in improvements in some aspects of care and has the potential to reduce secondary care costs. However, to improve patient experience, case management approaches need to be introduced in a way which respects patients' wishes, for example the ability to see a familiar doctor or nurse. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Commonwealth Care Alliance. A new approach to coordinated care for the chronically ill and frail elderly that organizationally integrates consumer involvement. Citation: The Journal of ambulatory care management, Oct 2003, vol. 26, no. 4, p. 355-361, 01489917 (2003 Oct-Dec) Author(s): Master, Robert, Simon, Lois, Goldfield, Norbert Abstract: While medical care is becoming more effective, our health care system is becoming increasingly fragmented from both a care and a financing perspective. This article summarizes our experience with integrating the delivery of care for catastrophically ill and frail elderly. We argue that true integration can only be done within a framework of a financing mechanism that gives all providers the financial incentive to deliver integrated care. Under such a financial arrangement, nurse practitioners and social workers provide much of the care within the home environment. This results in a higher quality care delivery system within a limited budget. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Journal of Ambulatory Care Management Cost-effectiveness of integrated care for elderly depressed patients in the PRISM-E study Citation: Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics, December 2009, vol./is. 12/4(205213+217+220), 1091-4358 (December 2009) Author(s): Wiley-Exley E., Domino M.E., Maxwell J., Levkoff S.E. Language: English Abstract: Background: One proposed strategy to improve outcomes associated with depression and other behavioral health disorders in primary care settings is to strengthen collaboration between primary care and specialty mental health care through integrated care (IC). Aims: We compare the cost-effectiveness of IC in primary care to enhanced specialty referral (ESR) for elders with behavioral health disorders from the Primary Care Research in Substance Abuse and Mental Health study, which was a randomized trial conducted between 2000 and 2002, using a societal perspective. Methods: The IC model had a behavioral health professional co-located in the primary care setting, and the primary care provider continued involvement in the mental health/substance abuse care of the patient. The comparison model, enhanced specialty referral (ESR), required referral to a behavioral health provider outside the primary care setting, and the behavioral health provider had primary responsibility for the mental health/substance abuse needs of the patient. Costs and clinical outcomes for 840 elders with depression were analyzed using incremental costeffectiveness ratios, the net benefits framework, cost-effectiveness planes, and acceptability curves. Outcomes were measured by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) and converted to depression-free days and Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALY). A variation on depression free days was proposed as an improvement on current methods. Separate analyses were conducted for Veteran's Affairs (n=365; n=175 in IC and n=190 in ESR) and non-Veteran's Affairs (n=475; n=242 in IC and n=233 in ESR) settings. Results: ESR participants in the non-VA sample exhibited lower average CES-D scores (i.e., an improvement in depressive symptoms) than did IC participants (beta = 2.8, p< 0.01), no such difference was noted in the VA sample (p > 0.05). Mean costs were $6,338 for VA IC participants; $7,007 for VA ESR participants; $3,657 for non-VA IC participants; and $3,673 for non-VA ESR participants. Although the cost-effectiveness planes suggest some uncertainty about the cost-effectiveness of the intervention, more than 75% of the bootstrap draws were considered costeffective due to a decrease in total costs for IC in the full Veteran's Affairs sample. Discussion: The findings indicate that IC is likely to be a cost-effective intervention in contrast with ESR in the Veteran's Affairs setting. In the non-Veteran's Affairs settings, IC is not a more cost-effective intervention in comparison with ESR. In the VA setting, the greater clinical improvement associated with IC coupled with the variation in costs and outcomes were such that IC was determined to be more cost-effective than ESR with a probability of 73-80%. Among non-VA participants, the lower clinical outcomes combined with no discernable differences in costs translated with a low probability that IC was more cost-effective than ESR, at any of the estimated values of clinical improvements. This suggests the importance of clinical setting in determining the clinical and cost effectiveness of IC for mental health. Limitations: Our analyses were restricted to a six-month period, based on selfreport, and did not include societal costs related to lost productivity and future costs. Implications: These results suggest that general integration has its advantages and, when such integration exists, further integrating behavioral health care into primary care might be considered as one way to improve depression in elders. The finding that ESR may be cost effective in some settings is also policy relevant. Further research is needed to analyze the components of the costs of ESR in non-VA settings and the effectiveness of IC in VA settings. Copyright © 2009 ICMPE. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics Developing and trial use of the new integrated care pathway for dementia in an urban city in Japan Citation: Alzheimer's and Dementia, July 2014, vol./is. 10/(P577), 1552-5260 (July 2014) Author(s): Takahashi M., Nakamura N., Yanaba R., Oishi S., Miyaoka H. Language: English Abstract: Project Description: Elderly people increase very rapidly in Japan, and caring the people with dementia becomes a big issue. Elderly people in big cities like Tokyo or Osaka increases around one million in 2025 compared in 2005. Japanese government had planned to establish medical centers for dementia in each prefecture and it was achieved last year. Sagamihara city is an ordinance-designated city in Kanagawa prefecture nearby Tokyo. Sagamihara city medical center for dementia was placed in Kitasato University East Hospital in April 2012. This center aims at consulting for therapy and care of demented people, early diagnosis and intervention, treating for the behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia, holding the regular meetings among related departments, and education about dementia for specialists as well as citizens. For developing the best information transfer system among the family, medical and care staff of patients, many specialists discussed the problems at present and developed the integrated care pathway in community, named "Sasaetecho" means supporting note. This pathway has used since October 2012 in order to grow up a good support system around the patient and family. We applied this pathway on 15 patients for one year. In this study we overview the process of developing the integrated care pathway and investigate how this pathway supports the patients and family. After the first version of "Sasaetecho" accomplished, information meeting were held several times for local medical and care staffs. Then we started to apply this pathway. Fifteen user's average age was 73 years old (range 5287), 5 male and 10 female. Their diagnoses were 10 Alzheimer's disease, 3 mixed type dementia, 1 dementia with Lewy bodies, and 1 mild cognitive impairment. Four patients live alone and the other live with their family. Nine patients have hypertension, six have hyperlipidemia, and three have diabetes mellitus. Overviewed their records, "Sasaetecho" was used very frequently in two cases, which their local care manager earnestly wrote comments in it. In conclusion, local staff education and motivation were important for the effective use of this tool. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a proactive, goal-oriented, integrated care model in general practice for older people. A cluster randomized controlled trial: Integrated Systematic Care for older People-the ISCOPE study Citation: European Journal of General Practice, September 2014, vol./is. 20/3(227), 1381-4788 (September 2014) Author(s): Blom J.W., Den Elzen W.P.J., Van Houwelingen A.H., Heijmans M., Stijnen T., Van Den Hout W.B., Gussekloo J. Language: English Abstract: Background: Care for older persons with a combination of somatic, functional, mental and/or social problems in general practice needs to shift from vertical disease-oriented care aiming at improvement of outcomes per disease, to horizontal goal-oriented care. Research Question: What is the feasibility and costeffectiveness of a pro-active and integrated way of working for older people in general practice with regard to functioning of the older people? Method: Cluster randomized trial including all persons aged > 75 years in 59 general practices (30 interventions, 29 controls), introducing a horizontal care plan for participants with a combination of problems, as identified with a structured postal questionnaire with 21 questions on four health domains. For participants with problems on > 3 domains, general practitioners (GPs) made an integral care plan using a functional geriatric approach. Control practices continued care as usual. Outcome measures: These were i) competence to perform activities of daily living independently, ii) quality of life (QoL), iii) satisfaction with delivered healthcare and iv) cost-effectiveness of the intervention, at 1-year follow-up. Results: Of the 11 476 registered eligible older persons, 7 285 (63%) participated in the screening, 1 921 (26%) had problems on > 3 domains. For 225 randomly chosen persons, a care plan was made. No beneficial effects were found on patients ' functioning, QoL or healthcare use/ costs. GPs experienced better overview of care needs and stability in the care for individual patients. Conclusion: This study indicates that GPs prefer proactive integrative care in general practice. Horizontal care using care plans for older people with complex problems can be a valuable tool in general practice. However, since no direct beneficial effect was found for older persons, we cannot recommend this intervention to improve patient outcomes in general practice. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Elder partnership for all-inclusive care (Elder-PAC): 5-year follow-up of integrating care for frail, community elders, linking home based primary care with an area agency on aging (AAA) as an independence at home (IAH) model Citation: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, April 2010, vol./is. 58/(S6), 0002-8614 (April 2010) Author(s): Kinosian B., Meyer S., Yudin J., Danish A., Touzel S. Language: English Abstract: Background: Pennsylvania's Integrated Care Initiative seeks to link AAA-administered home and community based services (HCBS) with medical care through Special Needs Plans (SNPs). EPAC has provided integrated, interdisciplinary team-directed care for frail elders for the past decade.Whether the initial savings have been maintained are unknown. Methods: We assembled a cohort of 2004 E-PAC consumers, with accrual, and followed them for 5 years.We compared community survival with local PACE programs, and HCBS benchmarks using Kaplan-Meier methods. We obtained care plan costs, medical costs using the HCC model with frailty, and estimated savings from adjusted state PACE payments and medical savings for a subsample of consumers enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan. Results: There were 92 consumers in the cohort (mean age 82; 86% female). Over 97% of available months were spent in the community for the cohort. Nursing home placement was 4.7/1000 member months, 5-year community survival 36%, with median community survival of 4.5 years; and cumulative mortality 43%. K-M 5-year estimates were not significantly different than PA PACE benchmarks, but were 25% greater than HCBS benchmarks (p<.01). Mean care plan costs were $24,290/member, nearly $9250 less than adjusted PACE payments. Projected medical expenditures were $25,550/member (HCC+frailty=3.13) with annual savings of $6130, or nearly $2,096,400 over 5 years (4104 member-months). Under the IAH allocation, this would save CMS $525,000 compared to FFS, and $3.1M compared to SNP payments. Conclusion: Integrated, IDT-directed all-inclusive care is a state of mind, not a single organizational form, with structures adhering to PACE principles achieving outcomes comparable to PACE, at nearly 30% lower cost. The ten-year Elder-PAC experience supports modifying Pennsylvania's Integrated Care Initiative to include housecall provider groups. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Journal of the American Geriatrics Society Effectiveness of community-based integrated care in frail COPD patients: a randomised controlled trial. Citation: NPJ primary care respiratory medicine, Jan 2015, vol. 25, p. 15022. (2015) Author(s): Hernández, Carme, Alonso, Albert, Garcia-Aymerich, Judith, Serra, Ignasi, Marti, Dolors, Rodriguez-Roisin, Robert, Narsavage, Georgia, Carmen Gomez, Maria, Roca, Josep, NEXES consortium Abstract: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) generates a high burden on health care, and hospital admissions represent a substantial proportion of the overall costs of the disease. Integrated care (IC) has shown efficacy to reduce hospitalisations in COPD patients at a pilot level. Deployment strategies for IC services require assessment of effectiveness at the health care system level. The aim of this study was to explore the effectiveness of a community-based IC service in preventing hospitalisations and emergency department (ED) visits in stable frail COPD patients. From April to December 2005, 155 frail community-dwelling COPD patients were randomly allocated either to IC (n=76, age 73 (8) years, forced expiratory volume during the first second, FEV1 41(19) % predicted) or usual care (n=84, age 75(9) years, FEV1 44 (20) % predicted) and followed up for 12 months. The IC intervention consisted of the following: (a) patient's empowerment for selfmanagement; (b) an individualised care plan; (c) access to a call centre; and (d) coordination between the levels of care. Thereafter, hospital admissions, ED visits and mortality were monitored for 6 years. IC enhanced self-management (P=0.02), reduced anxiety-depression (P=0.001) and improved health-related quality of life (P=0.02). IC reduced both ED visits (P=0.02) and mortality (P=0.03) but not hospital admission. No differences between the two groups were seen after 6 years. The intervention improved clinical outcomes including survival and decreased the ED visits, but it did not reduce hospital admissions. The study facilitated the identification of two key requirements for adoption of IC services in the community: appropriate risk stratification of patients, and preparation of the community-based work force. Source: Medline Effects of multidisciplinary integrated care on quality of care in residential care facilities for elderly people: a cluster randomized trial. Citation: CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne, Aug 2011, vol. 183, no. 11, p. E724. (August 9, 2011) Author(s): Boorsma, Marijke, Frijters, Dinnus H M, Knol, Dirk L, Ribbe, Miel E, Nijpels, Giel, van Hout, Hein P J Abstract: Sophisticated approaches are needed to improve the quality of care for elderly people living in residential care facilities. We determined the effects of multidisciplinary integrated care on the quality of care and quality of life for elderly people in residential care facilities. We performed a cluster randomized controlled trial involving 10 residential care facilities in the Netherlands that included 340 participating residents with physical or cognitive disabilities. Five of the facilities applied multidisciplinary integrated care, and five provided usual care. The intervention, inspired by the disease management model, consisted of a geriatric assessment of functional health every three months. The assessment included use of the Long-term Care Facility version of the Resident Assessment Instrument by trained nurse-assistants to guide the design of an individualized care plan; discussion of outcomes and care priorities with the family physician, the resident and his or her family; and monthly multidisciplinary meetings with the nurse-assistant, family physician, psychologist and geriatrician to discuss residents with complex needs. The primary outcome was the sum score of 32 risk-adjusted quality-of-care indicators. Compared with the facilities that provided usual care, the intervention facilities had a significantly higher sum score of the 32 quality-of-care indicators (mean difference - 6.7, p = 0.009; a medium effect size of 0.72). They also had significantly higher scores for 11 of the 32 indicators of good care in the areas of communication, delirium, behaviour, continence, pain and use of antipsychotic agents. Multidisciplinary integrated care resulted in improved quality of care for elderly people in residential care facilities compared with usual care. www.controlled-trials.com trial register no. ISRCTN11076857. Source: Medline Embracing integrated care by collaborating in project care with tan tock Seng hospital Citation: Annals of the Academy of Medicine Singapore, February 2011, vol./is. 40/2 SUPPL. 1(S37), 0304-4602 (February 2011) Author(s): Ramalingam V. Language: English Abstract: Due to the rapidly ageing population, Singapore is expected to see an increase in the number of end-of-life care cases in nursing homes. Nursing homes have the special privilege and responsibility to help older people finish their final journey with respect, dignity, and to die in a place of their choice. Death is an unavoidable journey for all. However, the concern is how it is being managed and executed with minimal sufferings for the residents. Promoting and improving quality end-of-life care in nursing homes involve multiple issues such as pain management, symptom control, psycho-social and spiritual care, ethical considerations, advance care planning, staff training, family participation and partnership with acute hospitals to provide integrated care for residents. With these values and beliefs, Lions Home for the Elders and 6 other nursing homes have embarked on "Project Care" with Tan Tock Seng Hospital since January 2010. The project has provided a consistent approach to the identification and management of residents requiring end-of-life care. It also helped to reduce the number of residents with chronic conditions being transferred back to hospital unnecessarily, thus, decreasing the number of residents who otherwise would have died in an unfamiliar environment such as the acute hospital or the Accident and Emergency Department. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in Annals of the Academy of Medicine - Singapore Enhancing health care in care homes: integration in practice – King’s Fund Blog Post http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/blog/2015/05/enhancing-health-care-care-homes-integration-practice Frail elderly patients. New model for integrated service delivery. Can Fam Physician. 2003 Aug; 49: 992–997. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2214268/ PROBLEM BEING ADDRESSED: Given the complex needs of frail older people and the multiplicity of care providers and services, care for this clientele lacks continuity. OBJECTIVE OF PROGRAM: Integrated service delivery (ISD) systems have been developed to improve continuity and increase the efficacy and efficiency of services. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: The Program of Research to Integrate Services for the Maintenance of Autonomy (PRISMA) is an innovative ISD model based on coordination. It includes coordination between decision makers and managers of different organizations and services; a single entry point; a case-management process; individualized service plans; a single assessment instrument based on clients' functional autonomy, coupled with a casemix classification system; and a computerized clinical chart for communicating between institutions and professionals for client monitoring. CONCLUSION: Preliminary results on the efficacy of this model showed a decreased incidence of functional decline, a decreased burden for caregivers, and a smaller proportion of older people wishing to enter institutions. Frailty pathway integrates service to provide more and better care outside of hospital – NHS Improving Quality http://www.nhsiq.nhs.uk/media/2570535/ltc_case_study_lincolnshire_frailty_pathway.pdf • Many frail elderly people in hospital could be cared for more effectively in the community, or could avoid admission altogether if more robust preventative services were in place • Lincolnshire West CCG led the creation of an integrated frailty pathway, supported by a wider range of services including a community response team, to enable the frail elderly to remain healthy and safe at home • The Canadian Frailty Scoring Tool was used to identify people at risk of unnecessary hospital admissions so that they can receive appropriate care planning and proactive support • Following the introduction of the new pathway, unscheduled hospital admissions and excess bed days for the over 75s have fallen and people are more likely to be cared for at home by the clinician best placed to help them Effectiveness of community-based integrated care in frail COPD patients: a randomised controlled trial – NPJ Primary Care Respiratory Medicine Article Background: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) generates a high burden on health care, and hospital admissions represent a substantial proportion of the overall costs of the disease. Integrated care (IC) has shown efficacy to reduce hospitalisations in COPD patients at a pilot level. Deployment strategies for IC services require assessment of effectiveness at the health care system level. Aims: The aim of this study was to explore the effectiveness of a community-based IC service in preventing hospitalisations and emergency department (ED) visits in stable frail COPD patients. Methods: From April to December 2005, 155 frail community-dwelling COPD patients were randomly allocated either to IC (n=76, age 73 (8) years, forced expiratory volume during the first second, FEV1 41(19) % predicted) or usual care (n=84, age 75(9) years, FEV1 44 (20) % predicted) and followed up for 12 months. The IC intervention consisted of the following: (a) patient's empowerment for self-management; (b) an individualised care plan; (c) access to a call centre; and (d) coordination between the levels of care. Thereafter, hospital admissions, ED visits and mortality were monitored for 6 years. Results: IC enhanced self-management (P=0.02), reduced anxiety-depression (P=0.001) and improved health-related quality of life (P=0.02). IC reduced both ED visits (P=0.02) and mortality (P=0.03) but not hospital admission. No differences between the two groups were seen after 6 years. Conclusion: The intervention improved clinical outcomes including survival and decreased the ED visits, but it did not reduce hospital admissions. The study facilitated the identification of two key requirements for adoption of IC services in the community: appropriate risk stratification of patients, and preparation of the community-based work force. Click here to access Fully integrated care for frail elderly: two American models Int J Integr Care. 2000 Oct-Dec; 1: e08. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1533997/ Purpose Integrated care for the frail elderly and other populations with complex, chronic, disabling conditions has taken centre stage among policymakers, planners and providers in the United States and other countries. There is a growing belief that integrated care strategies offer the potential to improve service co-ordination, quality outcomes, and efficiency. Therefore, it is critical to have a conceptual understanding of the meaning of integrated care and its various organisational models, as well as practical examples of how such models work. This article examines so-called “fully integrated” models of care in detail, concentrating on two major, well-established American programs, the social health maintenance organisation and the program of all-inclusive care for the elderly. Theory A major challenge to understanding the performance and outcomes of fully integrated care and other organisational models is the lack of a meaningful, analytical paradigm. This article builds upon the work of Walter Leutz, to develop a framework by which new and existing programs can be analysed. This framework is then applied to the two American models that are the focus of this article. Methods Existing data about integrated care in general, and the two model programs in particular, were collected and analysed from reports published by governmental and non-governmental organisations, and journal articles retrieved from Medline, HealthStar and other sources. Results and conclusions This analysis strongly suggests that fully integrated models of care, such as the social health maintenance organisation and program of all-inclusive care for the elderly, are not only feasible, but offer significant potential to improve the delivery of health and social care for frail elderly patients. In addition, the authors identify the factors that are the most critical to the success of fully integrated care, and offer lessons for their development and implementation. Finally, issues are raised concerning the transferability of this complex model to other countries, as well as the vital importance of evidence-based evaluation research in furthering the evolution of integrated care. Keywords: integrated care, managed care, frail elderly, chronic care, social health maintenance organisation, program of all-inclusive care for the elderly House Calls for Seniors: Building and Sustaining a Model of Care for Homebound Seniors J Am Geriatr Soc. 2009 Jun; 57(6): 1103–1109. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4036097/ Homebound seniors suffer from high levels of functional impairment and are high-cost users of acute medical services. This article describes a 7-year experience in building and sustaining a physician home visit program. The House Calls for Seniors program was established in 1999. The team includes a geriatrician, geriatrics nurse practitioner, and social worker. The program hosts trainees from multiple disciplines. The team provides care to 245 patients annually. In 2006, the healthcare system (62%), provider billing (36%), and philanthropy (2%) financed the annual program budget of $355,390. Over 7 years, the team has enrolled 468 older adults; the mean age was 80, 78% were women, and 64% were African American. One-third lived alone, and 39% were receiving Medicaid. Reflecting the disability of this cohort, 98% had impairment in at least one instrumental activity of daily living (mean 5.2), 71% had impairment in at least one activity of daily living (mean 2.6), 53% had a Mini-Mental State Examination score of 23 or less, 43% were receiving services from a home care agency, and 69% had at least one new geriatric syndrome diagnosed by the program. In the year after intake into the program, patients had an average of nine home visits; 21% were hospitalized, and 59% were seen in the emergency department. Consistent with the program goals, primary care, specialty care, and emergency department visits declined in the year after enrollment, whereas access and quality-of-care targets improved. An academic physician house calls program in partnership with a healthcare system can improve access to care for homebound frail older adults, improve quality of care and patient satisfaction, and provide a positive learning experience for trainees Increasing value for money in the Canadian healthcare system: new findings and the case for integrated care for seniors. Citation: Healthcare quarterly (Toronto, Ont.), Jan 2009, vol. 12, no. 1, p. 2-12, 1710-2774 (2009) Author(s): Hollander, Marcus J, Miller, Jo Ann, MacAdam, Margaret, Chappell, Neena, Pedlar, David Abstract: Given the recent economic climate and increasing costs in the Canadian healthcare system, we must ensure that we are getting the best value for money possible. This article presents new findings and a broad weight of evidence to make the case that it is possible to obtain better value for money in our healthcare system by adopting models of integrated care delivery for seniors and others with ongoing care needs. Source: Medline Innovative contracting for integrated care: what are the risks and benefits of various contracting methods? / Ricketts, Bob (King’s Fund, 2014) (see attached file) Integrated care The King’s Fund page on integrated care http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/topics/integrated-care Integrated care facilitation for older patients with complex health care needs reduces hospital demand Citation: Australian health review : a publication of the Australian Hospital Association, August 2007, vol./is. 31/3(451-461; discussion 449-450), 0156-5788 (Aug 2007) Author(s): Bird S.R., Kurowski W., Dickman G.K., Kronborg I. Language: English Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The evaluation of a new model of care for older people with complex health care needs that aimed to reduce their use of acute hospital services. METHOD: Older people (over 55 years) with complex health care needs, who had made three or more presentations to a hospital emergency department (ED) in the previous 12 months, or who were identified by community health care agencies as being at risk of making frequent ED presentations, were recruited to the project. The participants were allocated a "care facilitator" who provided assistance in identifying and accessing required health care services, as well as education in aspects of self management. Data for the patients who had been participants on the project for a minimum of 90 days (n=231) were analysed for their use of acute hospital services (ED presentations, admissions and hospital beddays) for the period 12-months pre-recruitment and post-recruitment. A similar analysis on the use of hospital services was conducted on the data of patients who were eligible and who had been offered participation, but who had declined (comparator group; n=85). RESULTS: Post recruitment, the recruited patients displayed a 20.8% reduction in ED presentations, a 27.9% reduction in hospital admissions, and a 19.2% reduction in bed-days. By comparison, the patients who declined recruitment displayed a 5.2% increase in ED presentations, a 4.4% reduction in hospital admissions, and a 15.3% increase in inpatient bed-days over a similar timeframe. CONCLUSION: A model of care that facilitates access to community health services and provides coordination between existing services reduces hospital demand. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in Australian Health Review Available from ProQuest in Australian Health Review Integrated care for frail older people 2012: a clinical overview / Jackie Morris Journal of Integrated Care 20(4) 257-264 http://search.proquest.com/docview/1095698217?pq-origsite=gscholar Integrated care for older people: examining workforce and implementation challenges / Centre for Workforce Intelligence (2014) (see attached file) Integrated care for the frail elderly Citation: HealthcarePapers, 2011, vol./is. 11/1(62-68; discussion 86-6891), 1488-917X (2011) Author(s): Heckman G.A. Language: English Abstract: Chronic disease management initiatives have thus far focused on single disease entities. The challenge of an aging population is the occurrence of multiple diseases, complicated by geriatric syndromes, in the same person. The term frailty is used to denote such persons, who are more vulnerable to poor health outcomes when challenged by a health stressor. In this paper, it is argued that frailty is a chronic condition and thus requires a chronic disease management approach. Hospital-based and community interventions for managing frail seniors are discussed, with a focus on enhancing primary care, and with appropriate and targeted support from geriatric specialists in the form of capacity building as well as direct clinical service. Finally, a model for integrating individual geriatric interventions into a broader system is proposed. Publication Type: Journal: Note Source: EMBASE Integrated care models for the frail older people [sic]: some international case studies and lessons / Kodner, Dennis L. (see attached file) Integrated care summit 2015: the journey from integrated care to population health systems A summit on integrated care at the King’s Fund on the 13th October http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/events/integrated-care-summit2015?utm_source=The+King%27s+Fund+Events&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=5759350_J2 96+IC+Summit+Call+for+Papers+-+IC+Bulletin+++290515&utm_content=ICSummit_FirstPara&dm_i=21AF,3FFXY,GCG0N2,C9PVX,1 Integrated models of care delivery for the frail elderly: International perspectives Citation: Gaceta Sanitaria, December 2011, vol./is. 25/SUPPL. 2(138-146), 0213-9111;1578-1283 (December 2011) Author(s): Beland F., Hollander M.J. Language: English Abstract: Introduction: Interest is growing in integrated systems of care for the frail elderly. Few such systems have been both documented and evaluated in a rigorous manner. The present article provides an international review of such systems. Methods: The literature on integrated care covered the period from 1997 to 2010, inclusive. Some 2,496 citations were identified from Age Line, PsycINFO, CINAHAL and MedLine and were reviewed. To be included in this paper, articles had to provide a good description of the care delivery system and good quality evaluations. Only nine articles were retained. Most of the articles reviewed described some form of coordinated care without evaluation. Results: There were essentially two types of models of integrated care delivery for the frail elderly. One was a smaller, community-based model that relied on cooperation across care providers, focused on home and community care, and played an active role in health and social care coordination. The second type of model was a large-scale model that could be applied at a national/provincial/state, or large regional health authority, level, had a single administrative authority and a single budget, and included both home/community and residential services. Discussion: Integrated care delivery can be achieved in various ways. Irrespective of which model is adopted, some of the key factors to be considered are how care can be coordinated effectively across different types of services, and how all the care provider organizations can be coordinated to ensure continuity of care for frail elderly persons. © 2011 SESPAS. Publication Type: Journal: Short Survey Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in Gaceta Sanitaria Integrated services for dementia: The formal carer experience Citation: Alzheimer's and Dementia, July 2013, vol./is. 9/4 SUPPL. 1(P528), 1552-5260 (July 2013) Author(s): Woolrych R., Sixsmith J. Language: English Abstract: Background: Concerns over the rising costs of healthcare and a globally ageing population has led to calls for change in how we deliver services to older people. Policy has been re-directed to the need for integrated care, particularly for those living with dementia, where care requirements fluctuate over time and there is a need for flexible and seamless service provision. Various different models of integrated care have been proposed, yet the central tenets of co-ordination, continuing care and responsiveness are common to all. In delivering this type of care, the role of the formal carer has often been overlooked and is thus poorly defined and articulated. The aim of this paper is to understand the experiences of formal carers working with the context of an integrated dementia service by exploring findings from a research-based evaluation conducted of an integrated dementia service in the UK. Methods: The integrated dementia service consisted of daycare, respite and outreach delivered by a single organisation. Each client was able to be signposted into and out of the different services as required. A qualitative, ethnographic approach was undertaken to capture the views of carers, including: observations in day care, domiciliary and respite care contexts (total 9 hours); semi-structured interviews with formal carers (n=6); and two focus groups with formal carers (n=9 across both groups). Results:Working with an integrated service and delivering flexible and responsive service provision presents individual, interpersonal and organisational challenges to the formal carer. These include: freedom to deliver person-centred care, managing flexibility, lack of appropriate knowledge and training, and clashes with traditional ways of working. Conclusions: To facilitate the successful delivery of integrated care, the emerging role of the formal carer needs to be more clearly articulated and supported within a service context. This requires providing formal training, role freedom and a supportive cross-organisational culture such that services can be delivered as and when older people with dementia need them. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Integration and continuity of care in health care network models for frail older adults Rev Saude Publica. 2014 Apr; 48(2): 357–365. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4206139/ A detailed review was conducted of the literature on models evaluating the effectiveness of integrated and coordinated care networks for the older population. The search made use of the following bibliographic databases: Pubmed, The Cochrane Library, LILACS, Web of Science, Scopus and SciELO. Twelve articles on five different models were included for discussion. Analysis of the literature showed that the services provided were based on primary care, including services within the home. Service users relied on the integration of primary and hospital care, day centers and inhome and social services. Care plans and case management were key elements in care continuity. This approach was shown to be effective in the studies, reducing the need for hospital care, which resulted in savings for the system. There was reduced prevalence of functional loss and improved satisfaction and quality of life on the part of service users and their families. The analysis reinforced the need for change in the approach to health care for older adults and the integration and coordination of services is an efficient way of initiating this change. Keywords: Frail Elderly, Health Services for the Aged, Comprehensive Health Care, Quality of Health Care, Review International experiments in integrated care for the elderly: A synthesis of the evidence Citation: International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, March 2003, vol./is. 18/3(222-235), 0885-6230 (01 Mar 2003) Author(s): Johri M., Beland F., Bergman H. Language: English Abstract: Background: The OECD countries have recently promoted policies of deinstitutionalisation and community-based care for the elderly. These policies respond to common cost pressures associated with population aging, and the challenge of providing improved care for the elderly. They aim to substitute less costly services for institutional ones, to improve patient satisfaction and decrease expenses. However, views concerning their success are mixed. We took a comparative cross-national approach to examine the evidence, to identify common features of an effective system of integrated care, and to examine the potential of such models to positively affect care of the elderly, and public finances. Methods: We conducted a systematic review of recent demonstration projects testing innovative models of care for the elderly in OECD countries. Projects included aimed to create comprehensive integration of acute and long-term care services, and were evaluated using a comparison group. Results: For each project, we report available results on rates of hospitalisation, long term care institutionalisation, utilisation and costs, impact on process of care, and health outcomes. In addition, the following common features of an effective integrated system of care were identified: a single entry point system; case management, geriatric assessment and a multi-disciplinary team; and use of financial incentives to promote downward substitution. Conclusions: Community-based care can impact favourably on rates of institutionalisation and costs. Comprehensive approaches to program restructuring are necessary, as cost-effectiveness depends on characteristics of the system of care. Expansion of successful programmes to achieve widespread use remains a critical challenge. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Publication Type: Journal: Review Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry Interprofessional and integrated care of the elderly in a family health team. Citation: Canadian family physician Médecin de famille canadien, Aug 2012, vol. 58, no. 8, p. e436. (August 2012) Author(s): Moore, Ainsley, Patterson, Christopher, White, Joy, House, Shelly T, Riva, John J, Nair, Kalpana, Brown, Allison, Kadhim-Saleh, Amjed, McCann, David Abstract: Family physicians provide most of the care for the frail elderly population, but many challenges and barriers can lead to difficulties with fragmented, ineffective, and inefficient services. To improve the quality, efficiency, and coordination of care for the frail elderly living in the community and to enhance geriatric and interprofessional skills for providers and learners. The Seniors Collaborative Care Program used an interprofessional, shared-care, geriatric model. The feasibility of the program was evaluated through a pilot study conducted between November 2008 and June 2009 at Stonechurch Family Health Centre, part of the McMaster Family Health Team. The core team comprised a nurse practitioner, an FP, and a registered practical nurse. Additional team members included a pharmacist, a dietitian, a social worker, and a visiting geriatrician. Twenty-five seniors were evaluated through the pilot program. Patients were assessed within 5 weeks of initial contact. Patients and practitioners valued timely, accessible, preventive, and multidisciplinary aspects of care. The nurse practitioner's role was prominent in the program, while the geriatrician's clinical role was focused efficiently. The family health team is ideally positioned to deliver shared care for the frail elderly. Our model allowed for a short referral time and easy access, which might allow seniors to remain in their environment of choice. Source: Medline Just for us: An academic medical center-community partnership to maintain the health of a frail low-income senior population Citation: Gerontologist, April 2006, vol./is. 46/2(271-276), 0016-9013 (April 2006) Author(s): Yaggy S.D., Michener J.L., Yaggy D., Champagne M.T., Silberberg M., Lyn M., Johnson F., Yarnall K.S.H. Language: English Abstract: Purpose: To promote health and maintain independence, Just for Us provides financially sustainable, in-home, integrated care to medically fragile, low-income seniors and disabled adults living in subsidized housing. Design and Methods: The program provides primary care, care management, and mental health services delivered in patient's homes by a multidisciplinary, multiagency team. Results: After 2 years of operation, Just for Us is serving nearly 300 individuals in 10 buildings. The program is demonstrating improvement in individual indices of health. Medicaid expenditures for enrollees are shifting from ambulances and hospital services to pharmacy, personal care, and outpatient visits. The program is not breaking even, but it is moving toward that goal. The program's success is based on a partnership involving an academic medical center, a community health center, county social and mental health agencies, and a city housing authority to coordinate and leverage services. Implications: Just for Us is becoming a financially sustainable way of creating a "system within a nonsystem" for low-income elderly persons in clustered housing. Copyright 2006 by The Gerontological Society of America. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Gerontologist Managed long-term care: care integration through care coordination. Citation: Journal of aging and health, Feb 2003, vol. 15, no. 1, p. 223-245, 0898-2643 (February 2003) Author(s): Fisher, Holly Michaels, Raphael, Terrie G Abstract: The New York State managed long-term care demonstration program combines traditional home, community, and institutional long-term care services with other benefits integral to maximizing overall well-being for a frail elderly population. A distinguishing feature of the model is the responsibility to coordinate both covered and noncovered services. This article, a case study of VNS CHOICE, a managed long-term care plan that serves 2,500 New York City residents, describes the program's operating structure, service delivery model, and care management strategies. By providing a capitated Medicaid long-term care benefit, VNS CHOICE can utilize a broad array of services, offer significant flexibility to care management staff, and support member and family involvement in care planning. Its broad care coordination responsibility allows it to achieve integrated care without integrated financing. Source: Medline Managing effective partnerships in older people's services Citation: Health and Social Care in the Community, September 2006, vol./is. 14/5(391-399), 09660410;1365-2524 (September 2006) Author(s): Nies H. Language: English Abstract: The integration of older people's services is a challenge to all countries with an ageing population. Although it is widely acknowledged that acute care, long-term care, social care, housing, leisure, education and other services should all operate in a more 'joined-up manner', achieving this in practice remains extremely difficult. Against this background, the European Union (EU) Care and Management of Services for Older People in Europe Network (CARMEN) project set out to explore the management of integrated care in 11 EU countries. Summarising key themes from the project, this paper explores the management of integrated care, the skills required, the mechanisms which aid successful integrated approaches, and future research priorities. Although very challenging, the concept of integrated care is still a promising way forward when seeking to meet the challenges of an ageing society. © 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Health & Social Care in the Community Available from EBSCOhost in Health & Social Care in the Community Available in HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY at JET Library, Leighton Medicaid-funded home care for the frail elderly and disabled: evaluating the cost savings and outcomes of a service delivery reform. Health Serv Res. 1996 Oct; 31(4): 489–508. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1070133/ OBJECTIVES: In response to rising demand and increased costs for home care services for frail elderly and disabled Medicaid clients, New York City implemented cluster care, a shared-aide model of home care. Our objective: to evaluate the effects of cluster care on home care hours and costs, client functioning, depressive symptoms, and satisfaction. DATA SOURCES: Client interviews, conducted prior to implementation and again 16 months later; Medicaid claims records; home attendant payroll files; and vendor agency records. STUDY DESIGN: The study employed a pretest/posttest design, comparing 229 clients at the first seven demonstration sites to 175 clients at four comparison sites before and after cluster care implementation. Regression methods were used to analyze pre and post-intervention data. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Cluster care reduced costs by about 10 percent. Most savings occurred among the more vulnerable clients (those with five or more ADL/IADL limitations). Clients at cluster care sites who started out with fewer than five limitations appeared to decline somewhat more slowly than similarly impaired clients at comparison sites, while those with more than five ADL/IADLs tended to decline more rapidly. This difference was small-less than one limitation per year. Cluster care is associated with a significant decline in satisfaction but appears unrelated to depressive symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Cluster care appears benign for home care clients with fewer limitations. For the more vulnerable, we recommend experimentation with low-cost interventions that might augment service and improve outcomes without reverting to traditional one-on-one care. Opening the black box of clinical collaboration in integrated care models for frail, elderly patients Citation: The Gerontologist, April 2013, vol./is. 53/2(313-325), 1758-5341 (Apr 2013) Author(s): de Stampa M., Vedel I., Bergman H., Novella J.L., Lechowski L., Ankri J., Lapointe L. Language: English Abstract: The purpose of the study was to understand better the clinical collaboration process among primary care physicians (PCPs), case managers (CMs), and geriatricians in integrated models of care. METHODS : We conducted a qualitative study with semistructured interviews. A purposive sample of 35 PCPs, 7 CMs, and 4 geriatricians was selected in 2 integrated models of care for frail elderly patients in Canada and France: System of Integrated Care for Older Patients of Montreal and Coordination of Care for Older Patients of Paris. Data were analyzed using a grounded theory approach. The dynamics of the collaboration process develop in three phases: (1) initiating relationships, (2) developing real two-way collaboration, and (3) developing interdisciplinary teamwork. The findings suggest that CMs and geriatricians collaborated well from the start and throughout the care management process. Real collaboration between the CMs and the PCPs occurred only later and was mostly fostered by the interventions of the geriatricians. PCPs and geriatricians collaborated only occasionally. The findings provide information about PCPs' commitment to the integrated models of care, the legitimization of the CM's role among PCPs, and the appropriate positioning of geriatricians in such models. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Gerontologist PACE: A model for integrated care of frail older patients Citation: Geriatrics, June 1998, vol./is. 53/6(62-73), 0016-867X (June 1998) Author(s): Lee W., Eng C., Fox N., Etienne M. Language: English Abstract: The Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) is a model of care that pools Medicare and Medicaid funds to provide acute and long-term care services for older patients through the use of interdisciplinary teams. Services include physician visits, prescription drugs, rehabilitation services, personal care workers, hospitalization, and nursing home care, if needed. PACE programs may also offer social services intervention, case management, respite care, or extended home care nursing. The PACE site assumes financial responsibility for all services. Now that PACE programs can become permanent providers under Medicare, their number is expected to grow. Publication Type: Journal: Review Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in Geriatrics Person centred care 2020: calls and contributions form health and social care charities. Citation: National Voices, February 2015. Author(s): National Voices. Full text: http://www.nationalvoices.org.uk/sites/www.nationalvoices.org.uk/files/2015_national_voices_ position_statement_update.pdf Physician home visits in homebound Citation: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, April 2015, vol./is. 63/(S80), 0002-8614 (April 2015) Author(s): Ang S., Liew Y. Language: English Abstract: Background: Physician home visits (HVs) are an important model of care for the homebound. This is a descriptive pilot study of a physician HVs for the homebound older adults who have difficulties accessing healthcare services in Brunei. Objective: To describe the complexity of homebound older adults. Methods: Home healthcare nurses identified clients who required ambulance services to attend outpatient clinic for the physician HVs. Demographic and clinical data were collected prospectively from a standardized physician home visit notes from June 2009 to August 2012. Patients younger than 60 years old were excluded in this study. Statistical analysis was undertaken using Microsoft Excel and SPSS Version 16.0. Categorical data were presented as frequencies using percentages and continuous data as mean or median. Results: There were 44 HVs made during the study period. Thirty-seven (84%) HVs were made to homebound older adults. Twenty-six (70%) were first time visits. Most patients were Malays race (86%), 51% were woman. Mean age was 78.6 +/-7.6 years (Median 79 years). Each older adult had a median of 4 documented medical conditions, most suffered from cerebrovascular accident (65%) and hypertension (56%). They had a median of 6 medications. All were dependent on their ADLs and IADLs; 22 (59%) employed caregiver. Twenty-one (57%) patients were on artificial feeding, 13 using nasogastric tube and 8 had percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy. These patients were mostly bedbound (84%), 18/36(50%) have pressure ulcers. The physician reviewed and prescribed all medications, addressed an average of 5 care plans during each visit. The median duration of each visit was 40 minutes. Discussions: Physician HVs is a supplanted but an essential healthcare for the homebound older adults. This pilot study described the complexity of homebound older adults, similar to nursing home residents, bedbound and dependent. They have multiple co-morbidities and psychosocial issues. The care of this cohort of older adults required an integrated care team approach similar to the Independence at Home Demonstration project. Even though HVs are time-consuming, this can be reduced with an efficient interdisciplinary team. We believe that physician HV model of care can provide high quality cost effective care to the homebound older adults. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE PRISMA: a new model of integrated service delivery for the frail older people in Canada Int J Integr Care. 2003 Jan-Mar; 3: e08. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1483944/ Purpose PRISMA is an innovative co-ordination-type Integrated Service Delivery System developed to improve continuity and increase the efficacy and efficiency of services, especially for older and disabled populations. Description The mechanisms and tools developed and implemented by PRISMA include: (1) coordination between decision-makers and managers, (2) a single entry point, (3) a case management process, (4) individualised service plans, (5) a single assessment instrument based on the clients' functional autonomy, and (6) a computerised clinical chart for communicating between institutions for client monitoring purposes. Preliminary results The efficacy of this model has been tested in a pilot project that showed a decreased incidence of functional decline, a decreased burden for caregivers and a smaller proportion of older people wishing to be institutionalised. Conclusion The on-going implementation and effectiveness study will show evidence of its real value and its impact on clienteles and cost. Keywords: health services for the aged, integrated service delivery systems, frail elderly, programme evaluation Progress toward integrating care for seniors in Canada: "We have to skate toward where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been." Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2011, vol. 11 Spec Ed, p. e016. (January 2011) Author(s): Macadam, Margaret Abstract: Integrating care is a developing feature of provincial health delivery in Canada for those with chronic conditions. The purposes of this project were to review the conceptual understandings underlying integrated care, examine the features of models of cost-effective care for the elderly, and then ascertain to what extent Canadian provinces were implementing these features. These goals were accomplished through a review of the integrated care literature followed by a survey of the Canadian provinces. A pretested questionnaire was sent to each of the 10 provincial Ministries of Health in 2008. The questionnaire collected basic background information and then asked a series of open- and close-ended questions about each of the best practice features of integrated care as found in the literature review. System improvements in integrating care for the elderly are being implemented in Canadian provincial health care systems. There has been substantial improvement in the delivery of case management services but the supply of some community services could be improved. As well, the linkages amongst primary, acute and community care remain weak. Providing an adequate supply of services is an ongoing issue in many provinces and could be the result of either inadequate funding and/or poor targeting of scarce resources. While it is promising that so many provinces are starting to break down the silos amongst types of health care service providers, much remains to be accomplished. These issues are at the core of integrating care and are among the challenges being faced by other countries. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Randomised trial of impact of model of integrated care and case management for older people living in the community Citation: British Medical Journal, May 1998, vol./is. 316/7141(1348-1351), 0959-8146 (02 May 1998) Author(s): Bernabei R., Landi F., Gambassi G., Sgadari A., Zuccala G., Mor V., Rubenstein L.Z., Carbonin P. Language: English Abstract: Objective: To evaluate the impact of a programme of integrated social and medical care among frail elderly people living in the community. Design: Randomised study with 1 year follow up. Setting: Town in northern Italy (Rovereto). Subjects: 200 older people already receiving conventional community care services. Intervention: Random allocation to an intervention group receiving integrated social and medical care and case management or to a control group receiving conventional care. Main outcome measures: Admission to an institution, use and costs of health services, variations in functional status. Results: Survival analysis showed that admission to hospital or nursing home in the intervention group occurred later and was less common than in controls (hazard ratio 0.69; 95%, confidence interval 0.53 to 0.91). Health services were used to the same extent but control subjects received more frequent home visits by general practitioners. In the intervention group the estimated financial savings were in the order of and 1125 ($1800) per year of follow up. The intervention group had improved physical function (activities of daily living score improved by 5.1%, v 13.0% loss in controls; P < 0.001). Decline of cognitive status (measured by the short portable mental status questionnaire) was also reduced 13.8% v 9.4%; P < 0.05). Conclusion: Integrated social and medical care with case management programmes may provide a cost effective approach to reduce admission to institutions and functional decline in older people living in the community. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in BMJ: British Medical Journal Available from ProQuest in British Medical Journal Reducing hospital bed use by frail older people: results from a systematic review of the literature Int J Integr Care. 2013 Oct-Dec; 13: e048. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3860583/ Introduction Numerous studies have been conducted in developed countries to evaluate the impact of interventions designed to reduce hospital admissions or length of stay (LOS) amongst frail older people. In this study, we have undertaken a systematic review of the recent international literature (2007-present) to help improve our understanding about the impact of these interventions. Methods We systematically searched the following databases: PubMed/Medline, PsycINFO, CINAHL, BioMed Central and Kings Fund library. Studies were limited to publications from the period 2007-present and a total of 514 studies were identified. Results A total of 48 studies were included for full review consisting of 11 meta-analyses, 9 systematic reviews, 5 structured literature reviews, 8 randomised controlled trials and 15 other studies. We classified interventions into those which aimed to prevent admission, interventions in hospital, and those which aimed to support early discharge. Conclusions Reducing unnecessary use of acute hospital beds by older people requires an integrated approach across hospital and community settings. A stronger evidence base has emerged in recent years about a broad range of interventions which may be effective. Local agencies need to work together to implement these interventions to create a sustainable health care system for older people. Keywords: older people, hospital bed use, admissions avoidance, integrated care, systematic review Successfully integrating aged care services: a review of the evidence and tools emerging from a long-term care program. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2013, vol. 13, p. e003. (2013 Jan-Mar) Author(s): Stewart, Michael J, Georgiou, Andrew, Westbrook, Johanna I Abstract: Providing efficient and effective aged care services is one of the greatest public policy concerns currently facing governments. Increasing the integration of care services has the potential to provide many benefits including increased access, promoting greater efficiency, and improving care outcomes. There is little research, however, investigating how integrated aged care can be successfully achieved. The PRISMA (Program of Research to Integrate Services for the Maintenance of Autonomy) project, from Quebec, Canada, is one of the most systematic and sustained bodies of research investigating the translation and outcomes of an integrated care policy into practice. The PRISMA research program has run since 1988, yet there has been no independent systematic review of this work to draw out the lessons learnt. Narrative review of all literature emanating from the PRISMA project between 1988 and 2012. Researchers accessed an online list of all published papers from the program website. The reference lists of papers were hand searched to identify additional literature. Finally, Medline, Pubmed, EMBASE and Google Scholar indexing databases were searched using key terms and author names. Results were extracted into specially designed spread sheets for analysis. Forty-five journal articles and two books authored or co-authored by the PRISMA team were identified. Research was primarily concerned with: the design, development and validation of screening and assessment tools; and results generated from their application. Both quasiexperimental and cross sectional analytic designs were used extensively. Contextually appropriate expert opinion was obtained using variations on the Delphi Method. Literature analysis revealed the structures, processes and outcomes which underpinned the implementation. PRISMA provides evidence that integrating care for older persons is beneficial to individuals through reducing incidence of functional decline and handicap levels, and improving feelings of empowerment and satisfaction with care provided. The research also demonstrated benefits to the health system, including a more appropriate use of emergency rooms, and decreased consultations with medical specialists. Reviewing the body of research reveals the importance of both designing programs with an eye to local context, and building in flexibility allowing the program to be adapted to changing circumstances. Creating partnerships between policy designers, project implementers, and academic teams is an important element in achieving these goals. Partnerships are also valuable for achieving effective monitoring and evaluation, and support to 'evidence-based' policy-making processes. Despite a shared electronic health record being a key component of the service model, there was an under-investigation of the impact this technology on facilitating and enabling integration and the outcomes achieved. PRISMA provides evidence of the benefits that can arise from integrating care for older persons, particularly in terms of increased feelings of personal empowerment, and improved client satisfaction with the care provided. Taken alongside other integrated care experiments, PRISMA provides further evidentiary support to policy-makers pursuing integrated care programs. The scale and scope of the research body highlights the long-term and complex nature of program evaluations, but underscores the benefits of evaluation, review and subsequent adaptation of programs. The role of information technology in supporting integration of services is likely to substantially expand in the future and the potential this technology offers should be investigated and harnessed. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Supporting frail seniors through a family physician and Home Health integrated care model in Fraser Health Int J Integr Care. 2014 Jan-Mar; 14: e001. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3956084/ Background A major effort is underway to integrate primary and community care in Canada's western province of British Columbia and in Fraser Health, its largest health authority. Integrated care is a critical component of Fraser Health's planning, to meet the challenges of caring for a growing, elderly population that is presenting more complex and chronic medical conditions. Description of integrated practice An integrated care model partners family physicians with community-based home health case managers to support frail elderly patients who live at home. It is resulting in faster response times to patient needs, more informed assessments of a patient's state of health and pro-active identification of emerging patient issues. Early results The model is intended to improve the quality of patient care and maintain the patients’ health status, to help them live at home confidently and safely, as long as possible. Preliminary pilot data measuring changes in home care services is showing positive trends when it comes to extending the length of a person's survival/tenure in the community (living in their home vs. admitted to residential care or deceased). Conclusion Fraser Health's case manager–general practitioner partnership model is showing promising results including higher quality, appropriate, coordinated and efficient care; improved patient, caregiver and physician interactions with the system; improved health and prevention of acute care visits by senior adult patients. Keywords: integrated care for frail seniors, family physician–case manager partnership, home health–primary care integration, integrated primary and community care Teams without walls: enabling partnerships between generalists and specialists. Citation: Clinical medicine (London, England), Feb 2009, vol. 9, no. 1, p. 74-75, 1470-2118 (February 2009) Author(s): Steel, Jonathan, Burnham, Rodney Abstract: This one-day conference for senior clinicians and NHS managers was a partnership between the King's Fund, Royal College of Physicians (RCP) and Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP). It explored clinical partnerships and integrated care by examining how to develop constructive and workable relationships between generalists and specialists that harness clinical skills, support professional practice and deliver excellent care to patients. Source: Medline Full Text: Available in CLINICAL MEDICINE at JET Library, Leighton Available from Highwire Press in Clinical Medicine Ten years of integrated care: backwards and forwards. The case of the province of Québec, Canada. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2011, vol. 11 Spec Ed, p. e004. (January 2011) Author(s): Vedel, Isabelle, Monette, Michele, Beland, François, Monette, Johanne, Bergman, Howard Abstract: Québec's rapidly growing elderly and chronically ill population represents a major challenge to its healthcare delivery system, attributable in part to the system's focus on acute care and fragmented delivery. Over the past few years, reforms have been implemented at the provincial policy level to integrate hospital-based, nursing home, homecare and social services in 95 catchment areas. Recent organizational changes in primary care have also resulted in the implementation of family medicine groups and network clinics. Several localized initiatives were also developed to improve integration of care for older persons or persons with chronic diseases. Québec has a history of integration of health and social services at the structural level. Recent evaluations of the current reform show that the care provided by various institutions in the healthcare system is becoming better integrated. The Québec health care system nevertheless continues to face three important challenges in its management of chronic diseases: implementing the reorganization of primary care, successfully integrating primary and secondary care at the clinical level, and developing effective governance and change management. Efforts should focus on strengthening primary care by implementing nurse practitioners, developing a shared information system, and achieving better collaboration between primary and secondary care. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Test and learn: Working towards integrated services. Citation: Nursing older people, Aug 2014, vol. 26, no. 7, p. 16-20, 1472-0795 (August 2014) Author(s): Hunt, Louise Abstract: By 2018 the government expects integrated health and social care to become the norm in England. From next April a £3.8 billion pooled budget called the Better Care Fund will be launched to support service redesign for integrated care. The overall aim of the integration policy is to shift more care into the community to address the challenges of an ageing population by preventing delayed discharges and avoiding emergency hospital admissions. Across England, there are as many different approaches to attaining this holy grail as there are interpretations of the word integration. Nursing Older People visited one pilot site in south east London to explore how integration works in practice and what effect it is having on community nursing services. Source: Medline Full Text: Available in NURSING OLDER PEOPLE at JET Library, Leighton Available from EBSCOhost in Nursing Older People The acute and long-term care interface. Integrating the continuum. Citation: Clinics in geriatric medicine, Aug 1995, vol. 11, no. 3, p. 481-501, 0749-0690 (August 1995) Author(s): Phillips-Harris, C, Fanale, J E Abstract: Acute and long-term care traditionally have been distinctly different health care services, separated by reimbursement mechanisms, types and numbers of providers, and overall approach to the management of chronic illness. Considerable effort has been made of late, primarily due to financial incentives, to integrate these two levels of care into a "seamless" continuum. Barriers to such an integration process must first be identified. Physician and other health care providers will need to develop the tools and resources necessary to manage frail, chronically ill patients in settings other than the traditional acute care hospital, as well as to develop information systems that allow communication to flow easily between all levels of care. As subacute or transitional care becomes a central piece of a health care delivery system, those tools become critical to the provision of quality, integrated care. Source: Medline The CareWell in Hospital program to improve the quality of care for frail elderly inpatients: results of a before-after study with focus on surgical patients. Citation: American journal of surgery, Nov 2014, vol. 208, no. 5, p. 735-746 (November 2014) Author(s): Bakker, Franka C, Persoon, Anke, Bredie, Sebastian J H, van Haren-Willems, Jolanda, Leferink, Vincent J, Noyez, Luc, Schoon, Yvonne, Olde Rikkert, Marcel G M Abstract: The objective of this study was to evaluate implementation of an innovative intervention designed to prevent complications and stimulate early rehabilitation among frail elderly inpatients. The program was implemented in April 2011. A mixed-methods process evaluation and before-after study were performed. Primary effect outcomes included incidence of hospital-acquired delirium, cognitive decline, and decline in activities of daily living (ADL) during hospital stay. Secondary endpoints included ADL performance 3 months postdischarge, readmission, and caregiver burden. One hundred ninety-one preintervention and 195 postintervention patients aged 70 years or older were included. Overall, no significant differences in primary endpoints were found. Mean ADL between discharge and follow-up improved (3.2 vs 5.7, P = .058). Caregivers rated burden of care lower at 3 months postdischarge (.5 vs -.6, P = .049). The CareWell in Hospital program was implemented satisfactorily. Although the low baseline delirium incidence (11%), higher comorbidity, and an increasing learning curve during a restricted implementation period potentially influenced the overall effects, this integrated care program may have beneficial effects on outcomes among frail elderly surgical patients. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from ProQuest in American Journal of Surgery, The Available from EBSCOhost in American Journal of Surgery Available from Elsevier in American Journal of Surgery, The The contribution of geriatric medicine to integrated care for older people. Citation: Age and ageing, Jan 2015, vol. 44, no. 1, p. 11-15 (January 2015) Author(s): Philp, Ian Abstract: to describe contribution of geriatric medicine to the development of integrated care for older people and to suggest future directions for the further development of integrated care for older people. literature review and case studies. geriatricians have made a significant contribution to the development of integrated care for older people. The feasibility of this approach has been shown in demonstration projects. Although there is only limited evidence from randomised controlled trials, integrated care seems likely to be beneficial. There is an opportunity to develop new approaches to integrated care for older people in prevention and provision of community alternatives to hospital care. the principles and practice of geriatric medicine have been shown to underpin the successful development of integrated care for older people and should continue to do so as new challenges emerge. © The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: [email protected]. Source: Medline The effects of an integrated care intervention for the frail elderly on informal caregivers: a quasi-experimental study Citation: BMC geriatrics, 2014, vol./is. 14/(58), 1471-2318 (2014) Author(s): Janse B., Huijsman R., de Kuyper R.D., Fabbricotti I.N. Language: English Abstract: This study explored the effects of an integrated care model aimed at the frail elderly on the perceived health, objective burden, subjective burden and quality of life of informal caregivers. A quasi-experimental design with before/after measurement (with questionnaires) and a control group was used. The analysis encompassed within and between groups analyses and regression analyses with baseline measurements, control variables (gender, age, co-residence with care receiver, income, education, having a life partner, employment and the duration of caregiving) and the intervention as independent variables. The intervention significantly contributed to the reduction of subjective burden and significantly contributed to the increased likelihood that informal caregivers assumed household tasks. No effects were observed on perceived, health, time investment and quality of life. This study implies that integrated care models aimed at the frail elderly can benefit informal caregivers and that such interventions can be implemented without demanding additional time investments from informal caregivers. Recommendations for future interventions and research are provided. Current Controlled Trials http://ISRCTN05748494. Registration date: 14/03/2013. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in BMC Geriatrics Available from National Library of Medicine in BMC Geriatrics Available from BioMed Central in BMC Geriatrics Available from ProQuest in BMC Geriatrics The future is frail: An innovative approach to managing patients in care homes Citation: Age and Ageing, January 2012, vol./is. 41/(i22), 0002-0729 (January 2012) Author(s): Shaw L., Cowie D., Dornan M., Bainbridge L., Crabtree L. Language: English Abstract: Background An increasing frail population in care homes is coupled with increasing acute hospital admissions. Although attempts have been made to improve this, little collaborative working exists due to fragmented, poorly coordinated services with immense communication difficulties. The NHS fails to provide a proactive, coordinated, costeffective service for a cohort of patients that are due to expand in numbers significantly over the next 20 years. Innovation An innovative nursing role was introduced to provide clinical care and education/ training for care home staff targeting 5 care homes in Gateshead with the highest hospital admission rates. A joint working arrangement with care home staff, a GP with an interest in Geriatrics and a Community Geriatrician was quickly established. Patients were case managed ensuring they all received a Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment and subsequently a personalised care plan and action plan. Weekly multidisciplinary team discussions coupled with family forum meetings helped implement care plans, provide treatment and allow an opportunity for learning. evaluation Clinical audit was undertaken to capture the impact of the role and demonstrated a reduction in hospital admissions of 45.5%, saving 440 bed days with an estimated cost saving of 243,146 compared to admission data in the previous 12 months. Qualitatively, overwhelming support was demonstrated from staff, patients and families who had all worked collaboratively over the course of the pilot. Conclusions This innovative role to provide proactive care in care homes resulted in fewer hospital admissions producing associated savings. Our pilot suggests a cost saving approach to a new integrated care pathway for care home patients, which could be expanded upon to develop a comprehensive frailty service with an ethos of patient centeredness at its core. Further studies are needed to confirm our findings and assess the full impact on other outcomes such as quality of life and mortality. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from Highwire Press in Age and Ageing Available from EBSCOhost in Age & Ageing The Growing Pains of Integrated Health Care for the Elderly: Lessons from the Expansion of PACE Milbank Q. 2004 Jun; 82(2): 257–282. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2690172/ The early success of the demonstration Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) led to its designation as a permanent Medicare program in 1997. But the growth in the number of programs and enrollment has lagged and does not meet expectations. This article offers insights into the mechanisms influencing the expansion of PACE, from information obtained in interviews and surveys of administrators, medical directors, and financial officers in 27 PACE programs. Sixteen barriers to expansion were found, including competition, PACE model characteristics, poor understanding of the program among referral sources, and a lack of financing for expansion. This experience offers important lessons for providing integrated health care to the frail elderly. The impact of an integrated care service on service users: the service users' perspective Citation: Journal of health organization and management, 2014, vol./is. 28/4(495-510), 1477-7266 (2014) Author(s): Hu M. Language: English Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of an integration programme on service users from users' own perspective. Multi-method approach was used. Both quantitative and qualitative data collection and analysis were employed to uncover and examine service users' views of the impact of the integration programme. An improvement in the physical functioning of one in three occupational equipment users; a rise in the level of satisfaction of 85 per cent of occupational health and 82 per cent of physiotherapy users; older people with complex problems and high-level needs were able to be helped to live at home; and waiting times for both assessment and for services within two weeks and four weeks were below the national achievement and ministerial targets. The impact of the integration programme on users was complex. Positive outcomes were achieved for some user groups and individuals but not for others. A lack of change outcomes in social care, and service users' low level of satisfaction with social care services appears to be associated with the impact of agency work and the predominant aim in social work of achieving maintenance and prevention outcomes. This paper contributes to knowledge on what and how the total integration in Cambridgeshire has benefited users. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE Full Text: Available from ProQuest in Journal of Health Organization and Management The short-term effects of an integrated care model for the frail elderly on health, quality of life, health care use and satisfaction with care Int J Integr Care. 2014 Oct-Dec; 14: e034. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4259147/ Purpose This study explores the short-term value of integrated care for the frail elderly by evaluating the effects of the Walcheren Integrated Care Model on health, quality of life, health care use and satisfaction with care after three months. Intervention Frailty was preventively detected in elderly living at home with the Groningen Frailty Indicator. Geriatric nurse practitioners and secondary care geriatric nursing specialists were assigned as case managers and co-ordinated the care agreed upon in a multidisciplinary meeting. The general practitioner practice functions as a single entry point and supervises the co-ordination of care. The intervention encompasses task reassignment between nurses and doctors and consultations between primary, secondary and tertiary care providers. The entire process was supported by multidisciplinary protocols and web-based patient files. Methods The design of this study was quasi-experimental. In this study, 205 frail elderly patients of three general practitioner practices that implemented the integrated care model were compared with 212 frail elderly patients of five general practitioner practices that provided usual care. The outcomes were assessed using questionnaires. Baseline measures were compared with a three-month followup by chi-square tests, t-tests and regression analysis. Results and conclusion In the short term, the integrated care model had a significant effect on the attachment aspect of quality of life. The frail elderly patients were better able to obtain the love and friendship they desire. The use of care did not differ despite the preventive element and the need for assessments followed up with case management in the integrated care model. In the short term, there were no significant changes in health. As frailty is a progressive state, it is assumed that three months are too short to influence changes in health with integrated care models. A more longitudinal approach is required to study the value of integrated care on changes in health and the preservation of the positive effects on quality of life and health care use. Keywords: frail elderly, integrated care, short-term effects 'Trying to do a jigsaw without the picture on the box': understanding the challenges of care integration in the context of single assessment for older people in England. Citation: International journal of integrated care, Jan 2007, vol. 7, p. e25. (2007) Author(s): Wilson, Rob, Baines, Susan, Cornford, James, Martin, Mike Abstract: Demographic ageing is one of the major challenges for governments in developed countries because older people are the main users of health and social care services. More joinedup, partnership approaches supported by information and communications technologies (ICTs) have become key to managing these demands. This article discusses recent developments towards integrated care in the context of one of the arenas in which integration is being attempted, the Single Assessment Process (SAP) to support the care for older people in England. It draws upon accounts of local SAP implementations in order to assess and reflect upon some of the successes and limitations of service integration enabled by ICTs. At the Department of Health in England, policy and strategy are directed at the integration of services through a 'whole systems' approach, with services that are interdependent upon one another and organised around the person that uses them. The Single Assessment Processes (SAP) is an instance of inter-organisational and cross-sectoral sharing of information intended to improve communication and coordination amongst professions and agencies and so support more integrated care. The aim of SAP is to ensure that older people receive appropriate, effective and timely responses to their health and social care needs and that professionals do not duplicate each others efforts. This article examines examples from two programmes of work within the context of SAP in England: one with the direction coming from local government social services, the other where the momentum is coming from the National Health Service (NHS). Both examples show that the policy and practice of ICT-supported integration continues to represent a significant challenge. Although the notion of integrated care underpinned by ICT-enabled information sharing is persuasive, it has limitations in practice. The notion of an 'open systems' approach is proposed as an alternative way of improving communication and coordination across the domains of health and social care. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from Free Access Content in International Journal of Integrated Care Available from National Library of Medicine in International Journal of Integrated Care Using HIT to deliver integrated care for the frail elderly in the UK: current barriers and future challenges. Citation: Work (Reading, Mass.), Jan 2012, vol. 41 Suppl 1, p. 4490-4493 (2012) Author(s): Waterson, Patrick, Eason, Ken, Tutt, Dylan, Dent, Mike Abstract: In this paper we briefly describe the results of a 3 year project examining the use of Health Information Technologies (e.g., electronic patient record systems) to deliver integrated care. In particular, we focus on one group of patient (the frail elderly) and efforts to design an e-health supported healthcare pathway (the frail elderly pathway--FEP). The aim of FEP is to bring together clinicians and staff from health and social care and allow them to share patient information. Our findings show that progress in delivering a fully-supported and working FEP has been slow, not least because of the difficulties experienced by healthcare staff in using current IT systems. In addition, there are many strategic and technical issues which remain unresolved (e.g., systems interoperability). Source: Medline Using principles of transition management while introducing and evaluating a model of care to improve care for frail older inpatients Citation: European Geriatric Medicine, September 2012, vol./is. 3/(S109-S110), 1878-7649 (September 2012) Author(s): Bakker F., Persoon A., Schoon Y., Olde Rikkert M. Language: English Abstract: Introduction.- Health care should be fundamentally reformed in order to realize efficient integrated care for older people. Question is how to both implement and integrate complex models of care in order to embed them in current practices, and to evaluate them scientifically. The Medical Research Council (MRC) established a framework for development and evaluation of complex interventions, but does not satisfactory cover influences of a changing complex adaptive care environment. Transition management focuses especially on processes of permanent practice change. Methods.- A transition management approach complementary to theMRCframework is being used to develop, implement and evaluate a complex intervention to improve care for frail older inpatients. Principles of transition management especially used in addition to MRC are: clear responsibilities of important actors and involvement of an independent transition manager; integration in existing structures as a final goal; and guiding the transition by closely monitoring and evaluating implementation processes. Results.- The CareWell in Hospital program, which is an adapted Hospital Elder Life Program (HELP), is developed as an innovative model of care to improve care for frail older inpatients by using a proactive geriatric consultation team and a team of trained volunteers. It is being implemented and evaluated with help of monthly and weekly structural meetings with important actors and a thorough process evaluation. Conclusion.- Both for the implementation and scientific evaluation of a complex intervention, a transition management approach added to the MRC framework for complex interventions is found useful in guiding change and understanding of scientific results. Publication Type: Journal: Conference Abstract Source: EMBASE Whole-system approaches to health and social care partnerships for the frail elderly: an exploration of North American models and lessons. (See attached file) Citation: Health & social care in the community, Sep 2006, vol. 14, no. 5, p. 384-390, 0966-0410 (September 2006) Author(s): Kodner, Dennis L Abstract: Irrespective of cross-national differences in long-term care, countries confront broadly similar challenges, including fragmented services, disjointed care, less-than-optimal quality, system inefficiencies and difficult-to-control costs. Integrated or whole-system strategies are becoming increasingly important to address these shortcomings through the seamless provision of health and social care. North America is an especially fertile proving ground for structurally oriented wholesystem models. This article summarises the structure, features and outcomes of the Program of AllInclusive Care for Elderly People (PACE) programme in the United States, and the Système de soins Intégrés pour Personnes Agées (SIPA) and the Programme of Research to Integrate Services for the Maintenance of Autonomy (PRISMA) in Canada. The review finds a somewhat positive pattern of results in terms of service access, utilisation, costs, care provision, quality, health status and client/carer satisfaction. It concludes with the identification of common characteristics which are thought to be associated with the successful impact of these partnership initiatives, as well as a call for further research to understand the relationships, if any, between whole-system models, services and outcomes in integrated care for elderly people. Source: Medline Full Text: Available from EBSCOhost in Health & Social Care in the Community Available from EBSCOhost in Health & Social Care in the Community Available in HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY at JET Library, Leighton Working towards integrated community care for older people: Empowering organisational features from a professional perspective Citation: Health Policy, January 2015, vol./is. 119/1(1-8), 0168-8510;1872-6054 (01 Jan 2015) Author(s): Janssen B.M., Snoeren M.W.C., Van Regenmortel T., Abma T.A. Language: English Abstract: Although multi-disciplinary cooperation between professionals is a prerequisite to provide integrated care in the community, this seems hard to realise in practice. Yet, little is known about the experiences of professionals who implement it nor about the organisational features professionals identify as empowering during this cooperation process. Therefore, a case study of a multi-disciplinary geriatric team was performed. The data-collection included observations of meetings, in-depth interviews and focus groups with professionals (. N=. 12). Data were analysed inductively and related to the three organisational levels within the model of organisational empowerment of Peterson and Zimmerman. Signs of empowering organisational features on the intraorganisational level were mutual trust and clear working routines. On the interorganisational level important features included improved linkages between participating organisations and increased insight into each other's tasks. Tensions occurred relating to the inter- and the extraorganisational level. Professionals felt that the commitment of the management of involved organisations should be improved just as the capacity of the team to influence (local) policy. It is recommended that policymakers should not determine the nature of professional cooperation in advance, but to leave that to the local context as well as to the judgement of involved professionals. Publication Type: Journal: Article Source: EMBASE