Health Policy and Systems Division, School of Public Health, University of Cape Town, Cape Town 7700, South Africa.
Western Cape Department of Health and Wellness, Cape Town 8000, South Africa.
Health Policy Plan. 2024 Oct 15;39(9):956-969. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czae070.
The role of the emergency medical service (EMS) is changing globally as ambulance crews respond to a shifting burden of disease, as well as societal stressors such as violence and inequality. New ways of thinking about how to provide emergency care are required to shift EMS from a role primarily focused on clinical care and transporting patients to hospital. In this paper, we present the experience of the Philippi Project (PP), an innovative community-based model of care developed by front line ambulance crews in a low-income neighbourhood in Cape Town, South Africa. Our insights were developed through observational, interview and document review work, within an overall embedded research approach. Our analysis draws on the everyday health systems resilience (EHSR) framework, which sees resilience as an emergent process that may be stimulated through response to stress and shock. Responses take the form of absorptive, adaptive or transformative strategies and are underpinned by system capacities (cognitive, behavioural and contextual). We consider the PP as a potentially transformative resilience strategy, defined as a new way of working that offered the promise of long-term health system gains. We found that the PP's initial development was supported by a range of system capacity attributes (such as the intentional development of relationships, a sense of collective purpose and creating spaces for constructive sense-making). However, the PP was hard to sustain over time because emergent ways of working were undermined both by other capacity attributes rooted in pre-existing organizational routines and two contextual shocks (Coronavirus and a violent incident). The paper adds a new empirical contribution to the still-small EHSR literature. In addition, the PP experience offers globally relevant lessons for developing community-based models of EMS care. It demonstrates that front line staff can develop creative solutions to their stressful daily realities, but only if space is created and protected.
全球范围内,急救医疗服务(EMS)的角色正在发生变化,救护车工作人员不仅要应对疾病负担的变化,还要应对暴力和不平等带来的社会压力。需要新的思维方式来提供紧急护理,将 EMS 从主要关注临床护理和将患者送往医院的角色转变。在本文中,我们介绍了 Philippi 项目(PP)的经验,这是一个创新的基于社区的护理模式,由南非开普敦一个低收入社区的一线救护车工作人员开发。我们的观点是通过观察、访谈和文件审查工作,在整体嵌入式研究方法内得出的。我们的分析借鉴了日常健康系统弹性(EHSR)框架,该框架将弹性视为一种可能通过对压力和冲击的反应而激发的新兴过程。应对措施采取吸收性、适应性或变革性策略的形式,并以系统能力(认知、行为和背景)为支撑。我们认为 PP 是一种潜在的变革性弹性策略,定义为一种提供长期健康系统收益的新工作方式。我们发现,PP 的初步发展得到了一系列系统能力属性的支持(例如,有意发展关系、集体目标感以及为建设性意义建构创造空间)。然而,随着时间的推移,PP 很难持续下去,因为新的工作方式受到根植于现有组织惯例的其他能力属性以及两个突发情况(新冠病毒和暴力事件)的破坏。本文为仍处于起步阶段的 EHSR 文献增加了新的经验贡献。此外,PP 的经验为开发基于社区的 EMS 护理模式提供了全球相关的经验教训。它表明,一线工作人员可以为他们的日常紧张现实创造有创意的解决方案,但前提是要创造和保护空间。