Faculty of Pharmacy, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
J Interprof Care. 2013 Sep;27(5):373-9. doi: 10.3109/13561820.2013.785503. Epub 2013 May 16.
Shared decision-making and interprofessional collaboration are important approaches to achieving consumer-centered care. The concept of shared decision-making has been expanded recently to include the interprofessional healthcare team. This study explored healthcare providers' perceptions of barriers and facilitators to both shared decision-making and interprofessional collaboration in mental healthcare. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 31 healthcare providers, including medical practitioners (psychiatrists, general practitioners), pharmacists, nurses, occupational therapists, psychologists and social workers. Healthcare providers identified several factors as barriers to, and facilitators of shared decision-making that could be categorized into three major themes: factors associated with mental health consumers, factors associated with healthcare providers and factors associated with healthcare service delivery. Consumers' lack of competence to participate was frequently perceived by mental health specialty providers to be a primary barrier to shared decision-making, while information provision on illness and treatment to consumers was cited by healthcare providers from all professions to be an important facilitator of shared decision-making. Whilst healthcare providers perceived interprofessional collaboration to be influenced by healthcare provider, environmental and systemic factors, emphasis of the factors differed among healthcare providers. To facilitate interprofessional collaboration, mental health specialty providers emphasized the importance of improving mental health expertise among general practitioners and community pharmacists, whereas general health providers were of the opinion that information sharing between providers and healthcare settings was the key. The findings of this study suggest that changes may be necessary at several levels (i.e. consumer, provider and environment) to implement effective shared decision-making and interprofessional collaboration in mental healthcare.
共享决策和跨专业合作是实现以消费者为中心的医疗保健的重要方法。共享决策的概念最近已经扩展到包括跨专业的医疗保健团队。本研究探讨了医疗保健提供者对精神保健中共享决策和跨专业合作的障碍和促进因素的看法。对 31 名医疗保健提供者(包括医学从业者(精神科医生、全科医生)、药剂师、护士、职业治疗师、心理学家和社会工作者)进行了半结构化访谈。医疗保健提供者确定了一些因素,这些因素既可以成为共享决策的障碍,也可以成为其促进因素,可以分为三个主要主题:与精神健康消费者相关的因素、与医疗保健提供者相关的因素以及与医疗保健服务提供相关的因素。精神健康专科医生经常认为,消费者缺乏参与能力是共享决策的主要障碍,而向消费者提供关于疾病和治疗的信息被所有专业的医疗保健提供者认为是共享决策的重要促进因素。虽然医疗保健提供者认为跨专业合作受到医疗保健提供者、环境和系统因素的影响,但不同医疗保健提供者对这些因素的重视程度有所不同。为了促进跨专业合作,精神健康专科医生强调需要提高全科医生和社区药剂师的精神健康专业知识,而一般健康提供者则认为,提供者之间和医疗保健环境之间的信息共享是关键。本研究的结果表明,可能需要在几个层面(即消费者、提供者和环境)进行变革,以在精神保健中实施有效的共享决策和跨专业合作。