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Care closer to home for children and young people who are ill: developing and testing a model of service delivery and organization

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
  • Gillian Parker
  • Gemma Spiers
  • Linda Cusworth
  • Yvonne Birks
  • Kate Gridley
  • Suzanne Mukherjee
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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>09/2012
<mark>Journal</mark>Journal of Advanced Nursing
Issue number9
Volume68
Number of pages13
Pages (from-to)2034-2046
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

AIMS: To report findings of a national survey of care closer to home services for children and young people and a typology based on these findings.

BACKGROUND: Providing care closer to home for children is a policy and practice aspiration internationally. While the main model of such services is children's community nursing, other models have also developed. Past research has proposed a relatively static typology of services, determined by where they are based, whether they are generic or specialist and whether they provide short- or longer-term input. As services develop, however, this typology needs further elaboration.

METHODS: A two-stage national survey of all primary care and hospital trusts in England, in mid-2008.

RESULTS: In all, 67% of trusts responded to the screening questionnaire and 75% of relevant services to the main stage questionnaire. Thirteen distinct types of services were identified initially. Cluster analysis of delivery and organization characteristics then identified a three-model typology: hospital-based, condition-specific services (36%); children's community nurses and other community services (45%) and other (mainly therapy-based) services (19%). The models differed in staffing, costs, functions, type of care provided and geographical coverage. Only a third of nurses in teams were paediatric-trained.

CONCLUSION: Care closer to home services are an established part of care for children and young people who are ill. They deal with complex and technical care and can prevent or reduce the length of acute hospital admission. Lack of readily available information about caseloads, case mix and costs may hamper their further development.

Bibliographic note

© 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.