Plochg Thomas, Delnoij Diana M J, Hoogedoorn Nelleke P C, Klazinga Niek S
Department of Social Medicine, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, PO Box 22660, 1100 DD, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2006 Mar 20;6:37. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-6-37.
To improve health-care delivery, care providers must base their services on community health needs and create a seamless continuum of care in which these needs can be met. Though, it is not obvious that providers apply this vision. Experiments with regulated competition in the health systems of many industrialized countries trigger providers to optimize individual organizational goals rather than improve population health from a community perspective. Thus, a tension exists between the need to collaborate and the need to compete. Despite or because of this tension, community health partnerships are being promoted, and this should enforce a needs-based and integrated care delivery.
In this single case study, we retrospectively explored how local health-care providers in Amsterdam collaborated for more than 30 years, interacting with the changes to the national health-care system. In-depth analysis of interviews, documents and literature focused on the complex relationship between the activities of this health partnership, its nature and its changing context.
The findings revealed that the partnership itself was successful and sustainable over time, although the partnership lost its initial broad explorative nature and narrowed its strategic focus towards care of the elderly. Furthermore, the realized projects--although they enforced integrated care--lost their community-based character. This declining scope of community-based integrated care seems to have been influenced by the incremental introduction of regulated competition in Dutch health care. This casts doubts on the ability of health partnerships to apply a vision of community-based integrated care within the context of competition.
Collaborating health-care providers can build seamless continuums of care in a competitive environment, although these will not automatically maximize community health with limited resources. Active policies with regard to health system design, incentive structures and population-based performance measures are warranted in order to insure that community-based integrated care through health partnerships will be more than just policy rhetoric.
为改善医疗服务的提供,医疗服务提供者必须依据社区健康需求来开展服务,并创建一个无缝的连续护理体系,以满足这些需求。然而,医疗服务提供者是否践行这一理念并不明确。许多工业化国家医疗系统中开展的规范竞争实验促使医疗服务提供者去优化个体组织目标,而非从社区角度改善人群健康。因此,在合作需求与竞争需求之间存在着矛盾。尽管存在或正是由于这种矛盾,社区健康伙伴关系仍在得到推广,这应该会强化基于需求的综合护理服务。
在这个单案例研究中,我们回顾性地探究了阿姆斯特丹当地的医疗服务提供者如何在30多年的时间里进行合作,并与国家医疗系统的变革相互作用。通过对访谈、文件和文献的深入分析,聚焦于这种健康伙伴关系的活动、其性质及其不断变化的背景之间的复杂关系。
研究结果表明,尽管该伙伴关系失去了其最初广泛的探索性质,并将战略重点缩小到老年护理方面,但随着时间的推移,该伙伴关系本身是成功且可持续的。此外,已实施的项目——尽管它们强化了综合护理——却失去了其基于社区的性质。这种基于社区的综合护理范围的缩小似乎受到了荷兰医疗保健中逐步引入规范竞争的影响。这使人对健康伙伴关系在竞争背景下应用基于社区的综合护理理念的能力产生怀疑。
合作的医疗服务提供者可以在竞争环境中构建无缝的连续护理体系,尽管这些体系不会在资源有限的情况下自动实现社区健康最大化。有必要制定关于医疗系统设计、激励机制和基于人群的绩效衡量的积极政策,以确保通过健康伙伴关系实现的基于社区的综合护理不仅仅是政策口号。