A scoping study and qualitative assessment of care planning and case management in community paramedicine

Introduction:  Community paramedicine (CP) establishes an ongoing patient relationship beyond short emergency care episodes. How care planning and case management have been adapted from the isolated incidents of traditional practice is unclear.  The objective of this study is to contribute to parame...

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Main Authors: Matthew Leyenaar, Brent McLeod, Joyce Chan, Walter Tavares, Andrew Costa, Gina Agarwal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Irish College of Paramedics 2018-07-01
Series:Irish Journal of Paramedicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irishparamedicine.com/index.php/ijp/article/view/76
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spelling doaj-01c76b9403fe43bebbed9aebabc25d5a2020-11-25T00:46:02ZengIrish College of ParamedicsIrish Journal of Paramedicine2009-938X2018-07-013110.32378/ijp.v3i1.7659A scoping study and qualitative assessment of care planning and case management in community paramedicineMatthew Leyenaar0Brent McLeod1Joyce Chan2Walter Tavares3Andrew Costa4Gina Agarwal5Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, ONHamilton Paramedic Service; Emergency Services Steering Committee, Hamilton Niagara Haldimand Brant Local Health Integration Network; Department of Family Medicine, McMaster UniversityDepartment of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster UniversityThe Wilson Centre and Post MD Education, Faculty of Medicine, and Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto; York Region Paramedic and Senior Services, Regional Municipality of York.Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster UniversityDepartment of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster University; Department of Family Medicine, McMaster UniversityIntroduction:  Community paramedicine (CP) establishes an ongoing patient relationship beyond short emergency care episodes. How care planning and case management have been adapted from the isolated incidents of traditional practice is unclear.  The objective of this study is to contribute to paramedic practice by examining broad areas of care planning in CP, identifying gaps in the evidence, clarifying key concepts, and reporting on the types of evidence that address and inform practice.  A qualitative analysis of included literature outlines program capacities and identifies comprehensive models of care that can inform clinical practice in CP.   Methods:  A scoping study was completed that included conducting a systematic search of the literature (in MEDLINE and CINAHL) and selecting relevant studies, followed by data extraction, summarizing, and reporting.  The authors of included studies were contacted to confirm the aspects of care planning that were extracted from their respective studies.  Aspects of care planning were compared between studies and used to generate a comprehensive list of existing practices.   Results:   Ten of 1648 studies met inclusion criteria.  Qualitative analysis identified 22 aspects of care planning along four themes; enrollment (n=3), assessment and management (n=6), intervention and care (n=5), and collaboration (n=8).  No study included all 22 aspects of care planning.  One aspect of care planning was present in all 10 studies; collaboration with primary care providers.   Conclusion:  The aspects of care planning identified through this study provide a framework that can guide service providers in the delivery of care and researchers in defined outcome measures to be assessed.  Future program development should be guided by the finding that all articles included in this study included collaboration with primary care providers.  By summarizing care planning within CP programs, ongoing program development can embrace collaboration with other care providers to help insure that patients receive the appropriate care.http://irishparamedicine.com/index.php/ijp/article/view/76Emergency Medical Services, Extended Care Paramedic, Community Paramedic, Care planning, Scoping study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew Leyenaar
Brent McLeod
Joyce Chan
Walter Tavares
Andrew Costa
Gina Agarwal
spellingShingle Matthew Leyenaar
Brent McLeod
Joyce Chan
Walter Tavares
Andrew Costa
Gina Agarwal
A scoping study and qualitative assessment of care planning and case management in community paramedicine
Irish Journal of Paramedicine
Emergency Medical Services, Extended Care Paramedic, Community Paramedic, Care planning, Scoping study
author_facet Matthew Leyenaar
Brent McLeod
Joyce Chan
Walter Tavares
Andrew Costa
Gina Agarwal
author_sort Matthew Leyenaar
title A scoping study and qualitative assessment of care planning and case management in community paramedicine
title_short A scoping study and qualitative assessment of care planning and case management in community paramedicine
title_full A scoping study and qualitative assessment of care planning and case management in community paramedicine
title_fullStr A scoping study and qualitative assessment of care planning and case management in community paramedicine
title_full_unstemmed A scoping study and qualitative assessment of care planning and case management in community paramedicine
title_sort scoping study and qualitative assessment of care planning and case management in community paramedicine
publisher Irish College of Paramedics
series Irish Journal of Paramedicine
issn 2009-938X
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Introduction:  Community paramedicine (CP) establishes an ongoing patient relationship beyond short emergency care episodes. How care planning and case management have been adapted from the isolated incidents of traditional practice is unclear.  The objective of this study is to contribute to paramedic practice by examining broad areas of care planning in CP, identifying gaps in the evidence, clarifying key concepts, and reporting on the types of evidence that address and inform practice.  A qualitative analysis of included literature outlines program capacities and identifies comprehensive models of care that can inform clinical practice in CP.   Methods:  A scoping study was completed that included conducting a systematic search of the literature (in MEDLINE and CINAHL) and selecting relevant studies, followed by data extraction, summarizing, and reporting.  The authors of included studies were contacted to confirm the aspects of care planning that were extracted from their respective studies.  Aspects of care planning were compared between studies and used to generate a comprehensive list of existing practices.   Results:   Ten of 1648 studies met inclusion criteria.  Qualitative analysis identified 22 aspects of care planning along four themes; enrollment (n=3), assessment and management (n=6), intervention and care (n=5), and collaboration (n=8).  No study included all 22 aspects of care planning.  One aspect of care planning was present in all 10 studies; collaboration with primary care providers.   Conclusion:  The aspects of care planning identified through this study provide a framework that can guide service providers in the delivery of care and researchers in defined outcome measures to be assessed.  Future program development should be guided by the finding that all articles included in this study included collaboration with primary care providers.  By summarizing care planning within CP programs, ongoing program development can embrace collaboration with other care providers to help insure that patients receive the appropriate care.
topic Emergency Medical Services, Extended Care Paramedic, Community Paramedic, Care planning, Scoping study
url http://irishparamedicine.com/index.php/ijp/article/view/76
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