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Integrated working between residential care homes and primary care: a survey of care homes in England

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Integrated working between residential care homes and primary care: a survey of care homes in England. / Gage, Heather; Dickinson, Angela; Victor, Christina et al.
In: BMC Geriatrics, Vol. 12, 71, 14.11.2012.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Gage, H, Dickinson, A, Victor, C, Williams, P, Cheynel, J, Davies, S, Iliffe, S, Froggatt, KA, Martin, W & Goodman, C 2012, 'Integrated working between residential care homes and primary care: a survey of care homes in England', BMC Geriatrics, vol. 12, 71. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2318-12-71

APA

Gage, H., Dickinson, A., Victor, C., Williams, P., Cheynel, J., Davies, S., Iliffe, S., Froggatt, K. A., Martin, W., & Goodman, C. (2012). Integrated working between residential care homes and primary care: a survey of care homes in England. BMC Geriatrics, 12, Article 71. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2318-12-71

Vancouver

Gage H, Dickinson A, Victor C, Williams P, Cheynel J, Davies S et al. Integrated working between residential care homes and primary care: a survey of care homes in England. BMC Geriatrics. 2012 Nov 14;12:71. doi: 10.1186/1471-2318-12-71

Author

Gage, Heather ; Dickinson, Angela ; Victor, Christina et al. / Integrated working between residential care homes and primary care : a survey of care homes in England. In: BMC Geriatrics. 2012 ; Vol. 12.

Bibtex

@article{03909c768ea84728901ad9f8c1871c1c,
title = "Integrated working between residential care homes and primary care: a survey of care homes in England",
abstract = "BackgroundOlder people living in care homes in England have complex health needs due to a range of medical conditions, mental health needs and frailty. Despite an increasing policy expectation that professionals should operate in an integrated way across organisational boundaries, there is a lack of understanding between care homes and the National Health Service (NHS) about how the two sectors should work together, meaning that residents can experience a poor {"}fit{"} between their needs, and services they can access. This paper describes a survey to establish the current extent of integrated working that exists between care homes and primary and community health and social services. MethodsA self-completion, online questionnaire was designed by the research team. Items on the different dimensions of integration (funding, administrative, organisational, service delivery, clinical care) were included. The survey was sent to a random sample of residential care homes with more than 25 beds (n = 621) in England in 2009. Responses were analysed using quantitative and qualitative methods. ResultsThe survey achieved an overall response rate of 15.8%. Most care homes (78.7%) worked with more than one general practice. Respondents indicated that a mean of 14.1 professionals/ services (other than GPs) had visited the care homes in the last six months (SD 5.11, median 14); a mean of .39 (SD.163) professionals/services per bed. The most frequent services visiting were district nursing, chiropody and community psychiatric nurses. Many (60%) managers considered that they worked with the NHS in an integrated way, including sharing documents, engaging in integrated care planning and joint learning and training. However, some care home managers cited working practices dictated by NHS methods of service delivery and priorities for care, rather than those of the care home or residents, a lack of willingness by NHS professionals to share information, and low levels of respect for the experience and knowledge of care home staff. ConclusionsCare homes are a hub for a wide range of NHS activity, but this is ad hoc with no recognised way to support working together. Integration between care homes and local health services is only really evident at the level of individual working relationships and reflects patterns of collaborative working rather than integration. More integrated working between care homes and primary health services has the potential to improve quality of care in a cost- effective manner, but strategic decisions to create more formal arrangements are required to bring this about. Commissioners of services for older people need to capitalise on good working relationships and address idiosyncratic patterns of provision to care homes.The low response rate is indicative of the difficulty of undertaking research in care homes",
author = "Heather Gage and Angela Dickinson and Christina Victor and Peter Williams and Jerome Cheynel and Sue Davies and Steve Iliffe and Froggatt, {Katherine Alison} and Wendy Martin and Claire Goodman",
year = "2012",
month = nov,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1186/1471-2318-12-71",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
journal = "BMC Geriatrics",
publisher = "BioMed Central",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Integrated working between residential care homes and primary care

T2 - a survey of care homes in England

AU - Gage, Heather

AU - Dickinson, Angela

AU - Victor, Christina

AU - Williams, Peter

AU - Cheynel, Jerome

AU - Davies, Sue

AU - Iliffe, Steve

AU - Froggatt, Katherine Alison

AU - Martin, Wendy

AU - Goodman, Claire

PY - 2012/11/14

Y1 - 2012/11/14

N2 - BackgroundOlder people living in care homes in England have complex health needs due to a range of medical conditions, mental health needs and frailty. Despite an increasing policy expectation that professionals should operate in an integrated way across organisational boundaries, there is a lack of understanding between care homes and the National Health Service (NHS) about how the two sectors should work together, meaning that residents can experience a poor "fit" between their needs, and services they can access. This paper describes a survey to establish the current extent of integrated working that exists between care homes and primary and community health and social services. MethodsA self-completion, online questionnaire was designed by the research team. Items on the different dimensions of integration (funding, administrative, organisational, service delivery, clinical care) were included. The survey was sent to a random sample of residential care homes with more than 25 beds (n = 621) in England in 2009. Responses were analysed using quantitative and qualitative methods. ResultsThe survey achieved an overall response rate of 15.8%. Most care homes (78.7%) worked with more than one general practice. Respondents indicated that a mean of 14.1 professionals/ services (other than GPs) had visited the care homes in the last six months (SD 5.11, median 14); a mean of .39 (SD.163) professionals/services per bed. The most frequent services visiting were district nursing, chiropody and community psychiatric nurses. Many (60%) managers considered that they worked with the NHS in an integrated way, including sharing documents, engaging in integrated care planning and joint learning and training. However, some care home managers cited working practices dictated by NHS methods of service delivery and priorities for care, rather than those of the care home or residents, a lack of willingness by NHS professionals to share information, and low levels of respect for the experience and knowledge of care home staff. ConclusionsCare homes are a hub for a wide range of NHS activity, but this is ad hoc with no recognised way to support working together. Integration between care homes and local health services is only really evident at the level of individual working relationships and reflects patterns of collaborative working rather than integration. More integrated working between care homes and primary health services has the potential to improve quality of care in a cost- effective manner, but strategic decisions to create more formal arrangements are required to bring this about. Commissioners of services for older people need to capitalise on good working relationships and address idiosyncratic patterns of provision to care homes.The low response rate is indicative of the difficulty of undertaking research in care homes

AB - BackgroundOlder people living in care homes in England have complex health needs due to a range of medical conditions, mental health needs and frailty. Despite an increasing policy expectation that professionals should operate in an integrated way across organisational boundaries, there is a lack of understanding between care homes and the National Health Service (NHS) about how the two sectors should work together, meaning that residents can experience a poor "fit" between their needs, and services they can access. This paper describes a survey to establish the current extent of integrated working that exists between care homes and primary and community health and social services. MethodsA self-completion, online questionnaire was designed by the research team. Items on the different dimensions of integration (funding, administrative, organisational, service delivery, clinical care) were included. The survey was sent to a random sample of residential care homes with more than 25 beds (n = 621) in England in 2009. Responses were analysed using quantitative and qualitative methods. ResultsThe survey achieved an overall response rate of 15.8%. Most care homes (78.7%) worked with more than one general practice. Respondents indicated that a mean of 14.1 professionals/ services (other than GPs) had visited the care homes in the last six months (SD 5.11, median 14); a mean of .39 (SD.163) professionals/services per bed. The most frequent services visiting were district nursing, chiropody and community psychiatric nurses. Many (60%) managers considered that they worked with the NHS in an integrated way, including sharing documents, engaging in integrated care planning and joint learning and training. However, some care home managers cited working practices dictated by NHS methods of service delivery and priorities for care, rather than those of the care home or residents, a lack of willingness by NHS professionals to share information, and low levels of respect for the experience and knowledge of care home staff. ConclusionsCare homes are a hub for a wide range of NHS activity, but this is ad hoc with no recognised way to support working together. Integration between care homes and local health services is only really evident at the level of individual working relationships and reflects patterns of collaborative working rather than integration. More integrated working between care homes and primary health services has the potential to improve quality of care in a cost- effective manner, but strategic decisions to create more formal arrangements are required to bring this about. Commissioners of services for older people need to capitalise on good working relationships and address idiosyncratic patterns of provision to care homes.The low response rate is indicative of the difficulty of undertaking research in care homes

U2 - 10.1186/1471-2318-12-71

DO - 10.1186/1471-2318-12-71

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

JO - BMC Geriatrics

JF - BMC Geriatrics

M1 - 71

ER -