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Integrating telecare for chronic disease management in the community: what needs to be done?

Integrating telecare for chronic disease management in the community: what needs to be done?
Integrating telecare for chronic disease management in the community: what needs to be done?
Background: telecare could greatly facilitate chronic disease management in the community, but despite government promotion and positive demonstrations its implementation has been limited. This study aimed to identify factors inhibiting the implementation and integration of telecare systems for chronic disease management in the community.

Methods: large scale comparative study employing qualitative data collection techniques: semi-structured interviews with key informants, task-groups, and workshops; framework analysis of qualitative data informed by Normalization Process Theory. Drawn from telecare services in community and domestic settings in England and Scotland, 221 participants were included, consisting of health professionals and managers; patients and carers; social care professionals and managers; and service suppliers and manufacturers.

Results: key barriers to telecare integration were uncertainties about coherent and sustainable service and business models; lack of coordination across social and primary care boundaries, lack of financial or other incentives to include telecare within primary care services; a lack of a sense of continuity with previous service provision and self-care work undertaken by patients; and general uncertainty about the adequacy of telecare systems. These problems led to poor integration of policy and practice.

Conclusion: telecare services may offer a cost effective and safe form of care for some people living with chronic illness. Slow and uneven implementation and integration do not stem from problems of adoption. They result from incomplete understanding of the role of telecare systems and subsequent adaption and embeddedness to context, and uncertainties about the best way to develop, coordinate, and sustain services that assist with chronic disease management. Interventions are therefore needed that (i) reduce uncertainty about the ownership of implementation processes and that lock together health and social care agencies; and (ii) ensure user centred rather than biomedical/service-centred models of care
1472-6963
131
May, Carl R.
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Finch, Tracy L.
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Cornford, James
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Exley, Catherine
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Gately, Claire
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Kirk, Sue
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Jenkings, K.
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Osbourne, Janice
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Robinson, A.
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Rogers, Anne
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Wilson, Robert
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Mair, Frances S.
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May, Carl R.
ef3787f2-f6cf-4e96-954a-4012f6879c89
Finch, Tracy L.
5935835f-0c98-4d08-b62d-a7e7032dadea
Cornford, James
e6ba2823-7abe-4d1f-b58a-aa1aff355163
Exley, Catherine
a6d075cf-6d08-4f74-98fa-526558eb1299
Gately, Claire
d3e553ca-d404-4c7f-b6ab-dc315e92d610
Kirk, Sue
bb78bede-b432-48d9-baef-9a317805f55d
Jenkings, K.
8ac283f7-bd7c-4adf-9e79-833b39dbc9d3
Osbourne, Janice
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Robinson, A.
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Rogers, Anne
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Wilson, Robert
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Mair, Frances S.
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May, Carl R., Finch, Tracy L., Cornford, James, Exley, Catherine, Gately, Claire, Kirk, Sue, Jenkings, K., Osbourne, Janice, Robinson, A., Rogers, Anne, Wilson, Robert and Mair, Frances S. (2011) Integrating telecare for chronic disease management in the community: what needs to be done? BMC Health Services Research, 11 (1), 131. (doi:10.1186/1472-6963-11-131).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: telecare could greatly facilitate chronic disease management in the community, but despite government promotion and positive demonstrations its implementation has been limited. This study aimed to identify factors inhibiting the implementation and integration of telecare systems for chronic disease management in the community.

Methods: large scale comparative study employing qualitative data collection techniques: semi-structured interviews with key informants, task-groups, and workshops; framework analysis of qualitative data informed by Normalization Process Theory. Drawn from telecare services in community and domestic settings in England and Scotland, 221 participants were included, consisting of health professionals and managers; patients and carers; social care professionals and managers; and service suppliers and manufacturers.

Results: key barriers to telecare integration were uncertainties about coherent and sustainable service and business models; lack of coordination across social and primary care boundaries, lack of financial or other incentives to include telecare within primary care services; a lack of a sense of continuity with previous service provision and self-care work undertaken by patients; and general uncertainty about the adequacy of telecare systems. These problems led to poor integration of policy and practice.

Conclusion: telecare services may offer a cost effective and safe form of care for some people living with chronic illness. Slow and uneven implementation and integration do not stem from problems of adoption. They result from incomplete understanding of the role of telecare systems and subsequent adaption and embeddedness to context, and uncertainties about the best way to develop, coordinate, and sustain services that assist with chronic disease management. Interventions are therefore needed that (i) reduce uncertainty about the ownership of implementation processes and that lock together health and social care agencies; and (ii) ensure user centred rather than biomedical/service-centred models of care

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Published date: 27 May 2011
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 366176
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/366176
ISSN: 1472-6963
PURE UUID: 2327f3fd-6c35-429c-91af-e540c86cb49c

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Date deposited: 30 Jun 2014 08:53
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 17:04

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Contributors

Author: Carl R. May
Author: Tracy L. Finch
Author: James Cornford
Author: Catherine Exley
Author: Claire Gately
Author: Sue Kirk
Author: K. Jenkings
Author: Janice Osbourne
Author: A. Robinson
Author: Anne Rogers
Author: Robert Wilson
Author: Frances S. Mair

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