Department of Hospital Administration, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bathinda, Punjab, 151001, India.
Department of Community and Family Medicine, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bathinda, Punjab, 151001, India.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Jan 9;24(1):42. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-10454-2.
With the escalating burden of chronic disease and multimorbidity in India, owing to its ageing population and overwhelming health needs, the Indian Health care delivery System (HDS) is under constant pressure due to rising public expectations and ambitious new health goals. The three tired HDS should work in coherence to ensure continuity of care, which needs a coordinated referral system. This calls for optimising health care through Integrated care (IC). The existing IC models have been primarily developed and adopted in High-Income Countries. The present study attempts to review the applicability of existing IC models and frame a customised model for resource-constrained settings.
A two-stage methodology was used. Firstly, a narrative literature review was done to identify gaps in existing IC models, as per the World Health Organization framework approach. The literature search was done from electronic journal article databases, and relevant literature that reported conceptual and theoretical concepts of IC. Secondly, we conceptualised an IC concept according to India's existing HDS, validated by multiple rounds of brainstorming among co-authors. Further senior co-authors independently reviewed the conceptualised IC model as per national relevance.
Existing IC models were categorised as individual, group and disease-specific, and population-based models. The limitations of having prolonged delivery time, focusing only on chronic diseases and being economically expensive to implement, along with requirement of completely restructuring and reorganising the existing HDS makes the adoption of existing IC models not feasible for India. The Indian Model of Integrated Healthcare (IMIH) model proposes three levels of integration: Macro, Meso, and Micro levels, using the existing HDS. The core components include a Central Gateway Control Room, using existing digital platforms at macro levels, a bucket overflow model at the meso level, a Triple-layered Concentric Circle outpatient department (OPD) design, and a three-door OPD concept at the micro level.
IMIH offers features that consider resource constraints and local context of LMICs while being economically viable. It envisages a step toward UHC by optimising existing resources and ensuring a continuum of care. However, health being a state subject, various socio-political and legal/administrative issues warrant further discussion before implementation.
随着印度人口老龄化和巨大的医疗需求导致慢性病和多种疾病负担不断增加,印度医疗保健提供系统(HDS)由于公众期望和雄心勃勃的新健康目标不断提高而面临持续压力。三级 HDS 应该协同工作,以确保连续性护理,这需要一个协调的转诊系统。这需要通过综合护理(IC)来优化医疗保健。现有的 IC 模式主要是在高收入国家开发和采用的。本研究试图审查现有 IC 模式的适用性,并为资源有限的环境制定定制模型。
使用两阶段方法。首先,根据世界卫生组织的框架方法,进行了叙述性文献综述,以确定现有 IC 模型中的差距。文献检索是从电子期刊文章数据库中进行的,并检索了报告 IC 概念和理论概念的相关文献。其次,根据印度现有的 HDS,我们概念化了一个 IC 概念,该概念经过多次合著者头脑风暴的验证。此外,高级合著者还根据国家相关性独立审查了概念化的 IC 模型。
现有的 IC 模型分为个体、团体和特定疾病以及基于人群的模型。存在的局限性包括交付时间延长、仅关注慢性病以及实施成本高昂,以及对现有 HDS 进行完全重构和重组,这使得采用现有的 IC 模型在印度不可行。印度综合医疗保健模型(IMIH)模型提出了三个层次的整合:宏观、中观和微观层次,使用现有的 HDS。核心组件包括一个中央网关控制室,使用宏观层面现有的数字平台、中观层面的桶溢出模型、三层同心圆形门诊设计以及微观层面的三门门诊概念。
IMIH 提供了考虑资源限制和 LMIC 当地背景的功能,同时具有经济可行性。它通过优化现有资源并确保护理连续性,为实现全民健康覆盖迈出了一步。然而,由于健康是一个州政府的问题,在实施之前,需要进一步讨论各种社会政治和法律/行政问题。