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Clustering by health and social care need in multple long-term conditions (MLTC): an exploratory qualitative study to understand the views of professionals and people living with MLTC about future interventions

Clustering by health and social care need in multple long-term conditions (MLTC): an exploratory qualitative study to understand the views of professionals and people living with MLTC about future interventions
Clustering by health and social care need in multple long-term conditions (MLTC): an exploratory qualitative study to understand the views of professionals and people living with MLTC about future interventions
Background: around one in four people are living with multiple long-term conditions (MLTC). Integrated care to holistically manage both health and social needs could improve outcomes for people living with MLTC, including lower rates of hospitalisation and mortality. However, given the number of people with MLTC and increasing strain on health and social care, stratified approaches to identifying and addressing social care needs may be more efficient and cost-effective. We have developed data driven clusters that group people with similar health and social care needs, which could identify patients at the highest risk of poor outcomes related to social care need.

Aim: to explore views about a future intervention based on these clusters.

Method: we aim to plan a cluster-based intervention that engages people living with MLTC and health and social care professionals to consider social care needs (SCNs) when consulting in primary care. We have conducted 14 interviews with professionals to explore their priorities and concerns about care delivery by MLTC clusters and 19 remote interviews with people living with MLTC to find out how well they identify with the MLTC clusters we have defined. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis.

Results: GPs are the ‘starting point’ for conversations about SCNs but need an efficient system to enable effective conversations. The cluster-based intervention could fill this gap.

Conclusion: this research identifies key considerations needed for an intervention to engage people with MLTC and health and social care professionals to consider SCNs in primary care.
intervention development, multimorbidity, person-based approach, primary care, social care
Holt, Sian
b6977ce7-16bf-4dde-92f4-18abe85ad093
Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Everitt, Hazel
80b9452f-9632-45a8-b017-ceeeee6971ef
Farmer, Andrew
c384123c-1276-4d06-a2b5-d5419bd83b1d
Dambha-Miller, Hajira
58961db5-31aa-460e-9394-08590c4b7ba1
Morrison, Leanne
920a4eda-0f9d-4bd9-842d-6873b1afafef
Holt, Sian
b6977ce7-16bf-4dde-92f4-18abe85ad093
Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Everitt, Hazel
80b9452f-9632-45a8-b017-ceeeee6971ef
Farmer, Andrew
c384123c-1276-4d06-a2b5-d5419bd83b1d
Dambha-Miller, Hajira
58961db5-31aa-460e-9394-08590c4b7ba1
Morrison, Leanne
920a4eda-0f9d-4bd9-842d-6873b1afafef

Holt, Sian, Santer, Miriam, Everitt, Hazel, Farmer, Andrew, Dambha-Miller, Hajira and Morrison, Leanne (2024) Clustering by health and social care need in multple long-term conditions (MLTC): an exploratory qualitative study to understand the views of professionals and people living with MLTC about future interventions. British Journal of General Practice Research Conference, London. 1 pp . (doi:10.3399/bjgp24X737589).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Other)

Abstract

Background: around one in four people are living with multiple long-term conditions (MLTC). Integrated care to holistically manage both health and social needs could improve outcomes for people living with MLTC, including lower rates of hospitalisation and mortality. However, given the number of people with MLTC and increasing strain on health and social care, stratified approaches to identifying and addressing social care needs may be more efficient and cost-effective. We have developed data driven clusters that group people with similar health and social care needs, which could identify patients at the highest risk of poor outcomes related to social care need.

Aim: to explore views about a future intervention based on these clusters.

Method: we aim to plan a cluster-based intervention that engages people living with MLTC and health and social care professionals to consider social care needs (SCNs) when consulting in primary care. We have conducted 14 interviews with professionals to explore their priorities and concerns about care delivery by MLTC clusters and 19 remote interviews with people living with MLTC to find out how well they identify with the MLTC clusters we have defined. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis.

Results: GPs are the ‘starting point’ for conversations about SCNs but need an efficient system to enable effective conversations. The cluster-based intervention could fill this gap.

Conclusion: this research identifies key considerations needed for an intervention to engage people with MLTC and health and social care professionals to consider SCNs in primary care.

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More information

Published date: 20 June 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © British Journal of General Practice 2024.
Venue - Dates: British Journal of General Practice Research Conference, London, 2024-03-13
Keywords: intervention development, multimorbidity, person-based approach, primary care, social care

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492017
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492017
PURE UUID: 97d9f3da-5011-4d8f-a811-8d7bb9ed4806
ORCID for Sian Holt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5448-3499
ORCID for Miriam Santer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7264-5260
ORCID for Hazel Everitt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7362-8403
ORCID for Hajira Dambha-Miller: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0175-443X
ORCID for Leanne Morrison: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9961-551X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Jul 2024 16:44
Last modified: 20 Jul 2024 01:59

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Contributors

Author: Sian Holt ORCID iD
Author: Miriam Santer ORCID iD
Author: Hazel Everitt ORCID iD
Author: Andrew Farmer
Author: Leanne Morrison ORCID iD

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