Roberts, Sue, Eaton, Simon, Finch, Tracy, Lewis-Barned, Nick, Lhussier, Monique, Oliver, Lindsay, Rapley, Tim and Temple-Scott, Dawn (2019) The Year of Care approach: developing a model and delivery programme for care and support planning in long term conditions within general practice. BMC Family Practice, 20 (1). p. 153. ISSN 1471-2296
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Abstract
Background: People with long term conditions (LTCs) make most of the daily decisions and carry out the activities which affect their health and quality of life. Only a fraction of each contact with a health care professional (HCP) is spent supporting this. This paper describes how care and support planning (CSP) and an implementation framework to redesign services, were developed to address this in UK general practice. Focussed on what is important to each individual, CSP brings together traditional clinical issues and the person's lived experience in a solution focussed, forward looking conversation with an emphasis on 'people not diseases'. Methods: The components of CSP were developed in three health communities using diabetes as an exemplar. This model was extended and refined for other single conditions and multimorbidity across 40 sites and two nations, over 15 years. Working with local teams and communities the authors used theoretical models of care, implementation and spread, developing and tailoring training, support and resources to embed CSP as usual care, sharing learning across a community of practice. Results: The purpose, content, process, developmental hurdles and impact of this CSP model are described, alongside an implementation strategy. There is now a robust, reproducible five step model; preparation, conversation, recording, actions and review. Uniquely, preparation, involving information sharing with time for reflection, enables an uncluttered conversation with a professional focussed on what is important to each person. The components of the Year of Care House act as a checklist for implementation, a metaphor for their interdependence and a flexible framework. Spreading CSP involved developing exemplar practices and building capacity across local health communities. These reported improved patient experience, practitioner job satisfaction, health behaviours and outcomes, teamwork, practice organisation, resource use, and links with wider community activities. Conclusions: Tested in multiple settings, CSP is a reproducible and practical model of planned care applicable to all LTCs, with the capacity to be transformative for people with LTCs and health care professionals. It recaptures relational dimensions of care with transactional elements in the background. Options for applying this model and implementation framework at scale now need to be explored.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | Long term conditions, Care planning, House of care, Self-management support, Practice development, Year of care, Implementation science |
Subjects: | B700 Nursing L400 Social Policy |
Department: | Faculties > Health and Life Sciences > Nursing, Midwifery and Health Faculties > Health and Life Sciences > Social Work, Education and Community Wellbeing |
Depositing User: | Elena Carlaw |
Date Deposited: | 18 Nov 2019 12:35 |
Last Modified: | 31 Jul 2021 22:07 |
URI: | http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/41469 |
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