Centre for Healthcare Resilience and Implementation Science, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
Centre Faculty of Health Sciences, SHARE - Centre for Resilience in Healthcare, University of Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2023 Aug 7;23(1):833. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-09839-0.
The COVID-19 pandemic has presented many multi-faceted challenges to the maintenance of service quality and safety, highlighting the need for resilient and responsive healthcare systems more than ever before. This review examined empirical investigations of Resilient Health Care (RHC) in response to the COVID-19 pandemic with the aim to: identify key areas of research; synthesise findings on capacities that develop RHC across system levels (micro, meso, macro); and identify reported adverse consequences of the effort of maintaining system performance on system agents (healthcare workers, patients).
Three academic databases were searched (Medline, EMBASE, Scopus) from 1st January 2020 to 30th August 2022 using keywords pertaining to: systems resilience and related concepts; healthcare and healthcare settings; and COVID-19. Capacities that developed and enhanced systems resilience were synthesised using a hybrid inductive-deductive thematic analysis.
Fifty publications were included in this review. Consistent with previous research, studies from high-income countries and the use of qualitative methods within the context of hospitals, dominated the included studies. However, promising developments have been made, with an emergence of studies conducted at the macro-system level, including the development of quantitative tools and indicator-based modelling approaches, and the increased involvement of low- and middle-income countries in research (LMIC). Concordant with previous research, eight key resilience capacities were identified that can support, develop or enhance resilient performance, namely: structure, alignment, coordination, learning, involvement, risk awareness, leadership, and communication. The need for healthcare workers to constantly learn and make adaptations, however, had potentially adverse physical and emotional consequences for healthcare workers, in addition to adverse effects on routine patient care.
This review identified an upsurge in new empirical studies on health system resilience associated with COVID-19. The pandemic provided a unique opportunity to examine RHC in practice, and uncovered emerging new evidence on RHC theory and system factors that contribute to resilient performance at micro, meso and macro levels. These findings will enable leaders and other stakeholders to strengthen health system resilience when responding to future challenges and unexpected events.
新冠疫情给医疗服务质量和安全的维护带来了多方面的挑战,比以往任何时候都更加凸显出建立有弹性和反应力的医疗体系的必要性。本综述旨在调查新冠疫情期间弹性医疗保健(RHC)的实证研究,以:确定研究的重点领域;综合分析在微观、中观和宏观系统层面上发展 RHC 的能力;以及确定维持系统性能对系统参与者(医护人员、患者)造成的不利后果。
从 2020 年 1 月 1 日至 2022 年 8 月 30 日,使用与系统弹性和相关概念、医疗保健和医疗保健环境以及 COVID-19 相关的关键词,在三个学术数据库(Medline、EMBASE、Scopus)中进行检索。使用混合归纳演绎主题分析方法对发展和增强系统弹性的能力进行综合分析。
共纳入 50 篇文献。与以往的研究一致,来自高收入国家的研究和在医院背景下使用定性方法的研究在纳入的研究中占主导地位。然而,已经取得了一些有希望的进展,包括在宏观系统层面开展的研究、开发定量工具和基于指标的建模方法,以及更多的中低收入国家参与研究(LMIC)。与以往的研究一致,确定了八项关键的弹性能力,这些能力可以支持、发展或增强弹性表现,分别是:结构、对齐、协调、学习、参与、风险意识、领导力和沟通。然而,医护人员不断学习和适应的需求,除了对常规患者护理产生不利影响外,还对医护人员的身心健康造成了潜在的不利后果。
本综述确定了与新冠疫情相关的医疗体系弹性新实证研究的增加。疫情为 RHC 的实践研究提供了独特的机会,并揭示了关于 RHC 理论和系统因素的新证据,这些因素有助于微观、中观和宏观层面的弹性表现。这些发现将使领导者和其他利益相关者能够在应对未来挑战和突发事件时增强医疗体系的弹性。