Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
J Health Organ Manag. 2012;26(6):713-36. doi: 10.1108/14777261211276989.
Health service organizations and professionals are under increasing pressure to work together to deliver integrated patient care. A common understanding of integration strategies may facilitate the delivery of integrated care across inter-organizational and inter-professional boundaries. This paper aims to build a framework for exploring and potentially aligning multiple stakeholder perspectives of systems integration.
DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: The authors draw from the literature on shared mental models, strategic management and change, framing, stakeholder management, and systems theory to develop a new construct, Mental Models of Integrated Care (MMIC), which consists of three types of mental models, i.e. integration-task, system-role, and integration-belief.
The MMIC construct encompasses many of the known barriers and enablers to integrating care while also providing a comprehensive, theory-based framework of psychological factors that may influence inter-organizational and inter-professional relations. While the existing literature on integration focuses on optimizing structures and processes, the MMIC construct emphasizes the convergence and divergence of stakeholders' knowledge and beliefs, and how these underlying cognitions influence interactions (or lack thereof) across the continuum of care.
MMIC may help to: explain what differentiates effective from ineffective integration initiatives; determine system readiness to integrate; diagnose integration problems; and develop interventions for enhancing integrative processes and ultimately the delivery of integrated care.
ORIGINALITY/VALUE: Global interest and ongoing challenges in integrating care underline the need for research on the mental models that characterize the behaviors of actors within health systems; the proposed framework offers a starting point for applying a cognitive perspective to health systems integration.
医疗机构和专业人员面临越来越大的压力,需要共同努力提供综合患者护理。对整合策略的共同理解可能有助于在组织间和专业间的边界内提供综合护理。本文旨在构建一个探索和潜在协调多个利益相关者对系统整合观点的框架。
设计/方法/方法:作者借鉴了关于共享心理模型、战略管理和变革、框架、利益相关者管理以及系统理论的文献,提出了一个新的概念,即综合护理心理模型(MMIC),它由三种心理模型组成,即整合任务、系统角色和整合信念。
MMIC 结构包含了许多已知的整合护理的障碍和促进因素,同时提供了一个基于理论的全面心理因素框架,这些心理因素可能会影响组织间和专业间的关系。虽然现有关于整合的文献侧重于优化结构和流程,但 MMIC 结构强调了利益相关者知识和信念的趋同和分歧,以及这些潜在认知如何影响整个护理连续体中的相互作用(或缺乏相互作用)。
MMIC 可能有助于:解释区分有效和无效整合计划的因素;确定系统整合的准备情况;诊断整合问题;并制定干预措施,以增强综合过程,并最终提供综合护理。
原创性/价值:全球对整合护理的兴趣和持续挑战突显了对健康系统内行为特征的心理模型进行研究的必要性;所提出的框架为应用认知观点来整合健康系统提供了一个起点。