Integrated care reform in urban China: a qualitative study on design, supporting environment and implementation
Abstract Background Initiatives on integrated care between hospitals and community health centers (CHCs) have been introduced to transform the current fragmented health care delivery system into an integrated system in China. Up to date no research has analyzed in-depth the experiences of these init...
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doaj-59aca97412064d2686ef60f7306eb86b2020-11-24T20:42:56ZengBMCInternational Journal for Equity in Health1475-92762017-10-0116111210.1186/s12939-017-0686-8Integrated care reform in urban China: a qualitative study on design, supporting environment and implementationYi Qian0Zhiyuan Hou1Wei Wang2Donglan Zhang3Fei Yan4Department of Social Medicine, School of Public Health, Fudan UniversityDepartment of Social Medicine, School of Public Health, Fudan UniversityDepartment of Social Medicine, School of Public Health, Fudan UniversityDepartment of Health Policy and Management, College of Public Health, University of GeorgiaDepartment of Social Medicine, School of Public Health, Fudan UniversityAbstract Background Initiatives on integrated care between hospitals and community health centers (CHCs) have been introduced to transform the current fragmented health care delivery system into an integrated system in China. Up to date no research has analyzed in-depth the experiences of these initiatives based on perspectives from various stakeholders. This study analyzed the integrated care pilot in Hangzhou City by investigating stakeholders’ perspectives on its design features and supporting environment, their acceptability of this pilot, and further identifying the enabling and constraining factors that may influence the implementation of the integrated care reform. Methods The qualitative study was carried out based on in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with 50 key informants who were involved in the policy-making process and implementation. Relevant policy documents were also collected for analysis. Results The pilot in Hangzhou was established as a CHC-led delivery system based on cooperation agreement between CHCs and hospitals to deliver primary and specialty care together for patients with chronic diseases. An innovative learning-from-practice mentorship system between specialists and general practitioners was also introduced to solve the poor capacity of general practitioners. The design of the pilot, its governance and organizational structure and human resources were enabling factors, which facilitated the integrated care reform. However, the main constraining factors were a lack of an integrated payment mechanism from health insurance and a lack of tailored information system to ensure its sustainability. Conclusions The integrated care pilot in Hangzhou enabled CHCs to play as gate-keeper and care coordinator for the full continuum of services across the health care providers. The government put integrated care a priority, and constructed an efficient design, governance and organizational structure to enable its implementation. Health insurance should play a proactive role, and adopt a shared financial incentive system to support integrated care across providers in the future.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0686-8Integrated careHealth care delivery systemPrimary health careQualitative studyChina |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Yi Qian Zhiyuan Hou Wei Wang Donglan Zhang Fei Yan |
spellingShingle |
Yi Qian Zhiyuan Hou Wei Wang Donglan Zhang Fei Yan Integrated care reform in urban China: a qualitative study on design, supporting environment and implementation International Journal for Equity in Health Integrated care Health care delivery system Primary health care Qualitative study China |
author_facet |
Yi Qian Zhiyuan Hou Wei Wang Donglan Zhang Fei Yan |
author_sort |
Yi Qian |
title |
Integrated care reform in urban China: a qualitative study on design, supporting environment and implementation |
title_short |
Integrated care reform in urban China: a qualitative study on design, supporting environment and implementation |
title_full |
Integrated care reform in urban China: a qualitative study on design, supporting environment and implementation |
title_fullStr |
Integrated care reform in urban China: a qualitative study on design, supporting environment and implementation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Integrated care reform in urban China: a qualitative study on design, supporting environment and implementation |
title_sort |
integrated care reform in urban china: a qualitative study on design, supporting environment and implementation |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
International Journal for Equity in Health |
issn |
1475-9276 |
publishDate |
2017-10-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Initiatives on integrated care between hospitals and community health centers (CHCs) have been introduced to transform the current fragmented health care delivery system into an integrated system in China. Up to date no research has analyzed in-depth the experiences of these initiatives based on perspectives from various stakeholders. This study analyzed the integrated care pilot in Hangzhou City by investigating stakeholders’ perspectives on its design features and supporting environment, their acceptability of this pilot, and further identifying the enabling and constraining factors that may influence the implementation of the integrated care reform. Methods The qualitative study was carried out based on in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with 50 key informants who were involved in the policy-making process and implementation. Relevant policy documents were also collected for analysis. Results The pilot in Hangzhou was established as a CHC-led delivery system based on cooperation agreement between CHCs and hospitals to deliver primary and specialty care together for patients with chronic diseases. An innovative learning-from-practice mentorship system between specialists and general practitioners was also introduced to solve the poor capacity of general practitioners. The design of the pilot, its governance and organizational structure and human resources were enabling factors, which facilitated the integrated care reform. However, the main constraining factors were a lack of an integrated payment mechanism from health insurance and a lack of tailored information system to ensure its sustainability. Conclusions The integrated care pilot in Hangzhou enabled CHCs to play as gate-keeper and care coordinator for the full continuum of services across the health care providers. The government put integrated care a priority, and constructed an efficient design, governance and organizational structure to enable its implementation. Health insurance should play a proactive role, and adopt a shared financial incentive system to support integrated care across providers in the future. |
topic |
Integrated care Health care delivery system Primary health care Qualitative study China |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0686-8 |
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