Measures for the integration of health and social care services for long-term health conditions: a systematic review of reviews

Abstract Background As people are living longer with higher incidences of long-term health conditions, there is a move towards greater integration of care, including integration of health and social care services. Integrated care needs to be comprehensively and systematically evaluated if it is to b...

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Main Authors: Laura Kelly, Jenny Harlock, Michele Peters, Ray Fitzpatrick, Helen Crocker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-04-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05206-5
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spelling doaj-4b0af326508b4f1d8f239d212ef047772020-11-25T03:02:43ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632020-04-0120111110.1186/s12913-020-05206-5Measures for the integration of health and social care services for long-term health conditions: a systematic review of reviewsLaura Kelly0Jenny Harlock1Michele Peters2Ray Fitzpatrick3Helen Crocker4Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of OxfordHealth Sciences, University of WarwickNuffield Department of Population Health, University of OxfordNuffield Department of Population Health, University of OxfordNuffield Department of Population Health, University of OxfordAbstract Background As people are living longer with higher incidences of long-term health conditions, there is a move towards greater integration of care, including integration of health and social care services. Integrated care needs to be comprehensively and systematically evaluated if it is to be implemented widely. We performed a systematic review of reviews to identify measures which have been used to assess integrated care across health and social care services for people living with long-term health conditions. Methods Four electronic databases (PUBMED; MEDLINE; EMBASE; Cochrane library of systematic reviews) were searched in August 2018 for relevant reviews evaluating the integration of health and social care between 1998 and 2018. Articles were assessed according to apriori eligibility criteria. A data extraction form was utilised to collate the identified measures into five categories. Results Of the 18 articles included, system outcomes and process measures were most frequently identified (15 articles each). Patient or carer reported outcomes were identified in 13 articles while health outcomes were reported in 12 articles. Structural measures were reported in nine articles. Challenges to measuring integration included the identification of a wide range of potential impacts of integration, difficulties in comparing findings due to differences in study design and heterogeneity of types of outcomes, and a need for appropriate, robust measurement tools. Conclusions Our review revealed no shortage of measures for assessing the structures, processes and outcomes of integrated care. The very large number of available measures and infrequent use of any common set make comparisons between schemes more difficult. The promotion of core measurement sets and stakeholder consultation would advance measurement in this area.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05206-5Integrated careSystematic reviewMulti-morbidityOutcomesLong-term health conditionsHealth and social care integration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Kelly
Jenny Harlock
Michele Peters
Ray Fitzpatrick
Helen Crocker
spellingShingle Laura Kelly
Jenny Harlock
Michele Peters
Ray Fitzpatrick
Helen Crocker
Measures for the integration of health and social care services for long-term health conditions: a systematic review of reviews
BMC Health Services Research
Integrated care
Systematic review
Multi-morbidity
Outcomes
Long-term health conditions
Health and social care integration
author_facet Laura Kelly
Jenny Harlock
Michele Peters
Ray Fitzpatrick
Helen Crocker
author_sort Laura Kelly
title Measures for the integration of health and social care services for long-term health conditions: a systematic review of reviews
title_short Measures for the integration of health and social care services for long-term health conditions: a systematic review of reviews
title_full Measures for the integration of health and social care services for long-term health conditions: a systematic review of reviews
title_fullStr Measures for the integration of health and social care services for long-term health conditions: a systematic review of reviews
title_full_unstemmed Measures for the integration of health and social care services for long-term health conditions: a systematic review of reviews
title_sort measures for the integration of health and social care services for long-term health conditions: a systematic review of reviews
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Abstract Background As people are living longer with higher incidences of long-term health conditions, there is a move towards greater integration of care, including integration of health and social care services. Integrated care needs to be comprehensively and systematically evaluated if it is to be implemented widely. We performed a systematic review of reviews to identify measures which have been used to assess integrated care across health and social care services for people living with long-term health conditions. Methods Four electronic databases (PUBMED; MEDLINE; EMBASE; Cochrane library of systematic reviews) were searched in August 2018 for relevant reviews evaluating the integration of health and social care between 1998 and 2018. Articles were assessed according to apriori eligibility criteria. A data extraction form was utilised to collate the identified measures into five categories. Results Of the 18 articles included, system outcomes and process measures were most frequently identified (15 articles each). Patient or carer reported outcomes were identified in 13 articles while health outcomes were reported in 12 articles. Structural measures were reported in nine articles. Challenges to measuring integration included the identification of a wide range of potential impacts of integration, difficulties in comparing findings due to differences in study design and heterogeneity of types of outcomes, and a need for appropriate, robust measurement tools. Conclusions Our review revealed no shortage of measures for assessing the structures, processes and outcomes of integrated care. The very large number of available measures and infrequent use of any common set make comparisons between schemes more difficult. The promotion of core measurement sets and stakeholder consultation would advance measurement in this area.
topic Integrated care
Systematic review
Multi-morbidity
Outcomes
Long-term health conditions
Health and social care integration
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05206-5
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