Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2013 Sep 6;3(9):e003341. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003341.
To examine the work of commissioning care for people with long-term conditions and the factors inhibiting or facilitating commissioners making service change.
Multisite mixed methods case study research, combining qualitative analysis of interviews, documents and observation of meetings.
Primary care trust managers and clinicians, general practice-based commissioners, National Health Service trust and foundation trust senior managers and clinicians, voluntary sector and local government representatives.
Three 'commissioning communities' (areas covered by a primary care trust) in England, 2010-2012.
Commissioning services for people with long-term conditions was a long drawn-out process involving a range of activities and partners. Only some of the activities undertaken by commissioners, such as assessment of local health needs, coordination of healthcare planning and service specification, appeared in the official 'commissioning cycle' promoted by the Department of Health. Commissioners undertook a significant range of additional activities focused on reviewing and redesigning services and providing support for implementation of new services. These activities often involved partnership working with providers and other stakeholders and appeared to be largely divorced from contracting and financial negotiations. At least for long-term condition services, the time and effort involved in such work appeared to be disproportionate to the anticipated or likely service gains. Commissioners adopting an incremental approach to service change in defined and manageable areas of work appeared to be more successful in terms of delivering planned changes in service delivery than those attempting to bring about wide-scale change across complex systems.
Commissioning for long-term condition services challenges the conventional distinction between commissioners and providers with a significant amount of work focused on redesigning services in partnership with providers. Such work is labour-intensive and potentially unsustainable at a time of reduced finances. New clinical commissioning groups will need to determine how best to balance the relational and transactional elements of commissioning.
考察长期病患者的委托护理工作以及制约或促进委托方进行服务变革的因素。
多地点混合方法案例研究,结合对访谈、文件的定性分析以及会议观察。
初级保健信托经理和临床医生、基于全科实践的委托方、NHS 信托和基金会信托高级管理人员和临床医生、志愿部门和地方政府代表。
英格兰的三个“委托社区”(初级保健信托覆盖的区域),2010-2012 年。
为长期病患者提供服务是一个漫长的过程,涉及到一系列的活动和合作伙伴。委托方开展的活动中,只有部分活动,如评估当地健康需求、协调医疗保健规划和服务规范,出现在卫生部推广的官方“委托周期”中。委托方开展了大量额外的活动,重点是审查和重新设计服务,并为新服务的实施提供支持。这些活动通常涉及与提供者和其他利益相关者的合作,似乎与合同和财务谈判基本脱节。至少对于长期病服务而言,此类工作所涉及的时间和精力与预期或可能的服务收益似乎不成比例。委托方采用增量方法在明确和可管理的工作领域进行服务变革,似乎比那些试图在复杂系统中进行广泛变革的委托方更成功地实现了服务提供的计划变革。
长期病服务的委托对委托方和提供者之间的传统区别提出了挑战,大量工作侧重于与提供者合作重新设计服务。这种工作劳动密集型,在资金减少的情况下可能难以持续。新的临床委托小组将需要确定如何最好地平衡委托的关系和交易要素。