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Integrated care

About: Integrated care is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7318 publications have been published within this topic receiving 106960 citations. The topic is also known as: Integrated Delivery of Health Care & Delivery of Health Care, Integrated.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Research, design, and implementation efforts may support clinical decision making for depression by improving tools to incorporate depression symptom data into existing electronic health record systems, and enhancing measurement of treatment fidelity and treatment processes.
Abstract: Clinical decision making encompasses a broad set of processes that contribute to the effectiveness of depression treatments. There is emerging interest in using digital technologies to support effective and efficient clinical decision making. In this paper, we provide "snapshots" of research and current directions on ways that digital technologies can support clinical decision making in depression treatment. Practical facets of clinical decision making are reviewed, then research, design, and implementation opportunities where technology can potentially enhance clinical decision making are outlined. Discussions of these opportunities are organized around three established movements designed to enhance clinical decision making for depression treatment, including measurement-based care, integrated care, and personalized medicine. Research, design, and implementation efforts may support clinical decision making for depression by (1) improving tools to incorporate depression symptom data into existing electronic health record systems, (2) enhancing measurement of treatment fidelity and treatment processes, (3) harnessing smartphone and biosensor data to inform clinical decision making, (4) enhancing tools that support communication and care coordination between patients and providers and within provider teams, and (5) leveraging treatment and outcome data from electronic health record systems to support personalized depression treatment. The current climate of rapid changes in both healthcare and digital technologies facilitates an urgent need for research, design, and implementation of digital technologies that explicitly support clinical decision making. Ensuring that such tools are efficient, effective, and usable in frontline treatment settings will be essential for their success and will require engagement of stakeholders from multiple domains.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new randomized trial design, the Micro‐Randomized Trial (MRT), is described for informing the development of mHealth interventions, and examples of scientific questions important to theDevelopment of an mHealth intervention are provided.
Abstract: Mobile health (mHealth) interventions are a promising tool in providing digitally mediated integrative care. They can extend care outside of the clinic by providing reminders to take medications, assisting in managing symptoms, and supporting healthy behaviors including physical activity, healthy eating, and stress management. mHealth interventions can adapt the delivery of care across time in order to optimize treatment effectiveness. Yet there exists limited empirical evidence useful to the development of adaptive mHealth interventions. This article describes a new randomized trial design, the Micro-Randomized Trial (MRT), for informing the development of mHealth interventions. We provide examples of scientific questions important to the development of an mHealth intervention, and describe how these questions can be answered using an MRT.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 2021-Ejso
TL;DR: The journey to develop a system wide prehabilitation model for patients with cancer is described and the successful implementation of the P4C pathway in GM presents a best practice model that might be adopted by other local and combined authority areas nationally.
Abstract: Patients undergoing major cancer interventions such as major surgical resection, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and immunotherapy are prone to the adverse effects of their cancer, as well as to the side effects of the treatments designed to cure them. The Prehabilitation process supports cancer patients in preparing for the physiological challenges of their cancer treatments, whilst aiming to shorten recovery time, reduce peri-operative complications and improve compliance with non-surgical treatments. Prehabilitation will be most useful in older patients. Greater Manchester Integrated Care system is the first regional system in the UK to introduce delivery of system-wide, large scale physical activity supported multi-modal prehabilitation and recovery programme, Prehab4Cancer as a standard of care for cancer patients. It builds upon the successful implementation of Enhanced Recovery After Surgery + programme to improve surgical care in Greater Manchester. During this review we describe the journey to develop a system wide prehabilitation model for patients with cancer. Prehab4Cancer to date has focused on robust co-design, development, and implementation of an effective service model with attention paid to stakeholder engagement. This has led to receipt of high numbers of referrals from across Greater Manchester for the all the cancer groups involved. The successful implementation of the P4C pathway in GM presents a best practice model that might be adopted by other local and combined authority areas nationally.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is argued that the study of integrated care has focused perhaps overmuch on understanding the complex and multi-dimensional nature ofIntegrated care as a process and less on its role as a ‘movement for change’ in terms of fundamentally challenging the current and future design of care systems.
Abstract: In previous editorials, it has been argued that the study of integrated care has focused perhaps overmuch on understanding the complex and multi-dimensional nature of integrated care as a process and less on its role as a ‘movement for change’ in terms of fundamentally challenging the current and future design of care systems [1]. For example, whilst it is commonly perceived that integrated care should be fundamentally person-centred (i.e. that practical approaches to integrated care should be characterised by services that are responsive to people's holistic needs), it is rare to listen to those who think integrated care should also involve people and communities as co-producers of care [2].

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a medical record review of women released from a minimum 6-week period of incarceration in New South Wales correctional centres between May 2013 and January 2014 was carried out.
Abstract: When women come into prison, many have unmet health needs. In this study we examine the health care provided to women in prison and their identified health needs, and discuss opportunities for improved healthcare delivery. We undertook a medical record review of women released from a minimum 6-week period of incarceration in New South Wales correctional centres between May 2013 and January 2014. Records from 231 periods of incarceration were reviewed. At reception, 52% of women were identified as having anxiety or depression. Hearing health was not documented despite 30% of records being of women from an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander background, a high-risk group for whom hearing screening is recommended. Most women had multiple in-prison clinical contacts, including interactions with general and specialised nurses (97%), general practitioners (65%) and psychiatrists (35%). At release, 49% were on psychotropic medication and most required ongoing management for: mental health (71%), substance misuse (65%) and physical health (61%) problems. External specialist appointments were pending in 7% at release. Health management plans generated in prison were not always completed before release for reasons including custodial factors and waits for hospital-based appointments. Provision of effective health care in prison requires improved integration with community health services, including timely access to a wide range of health services while women are in prison, and continuity of care at release.

39 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202384
2022166
2021672
2020663
2019630
2018663