首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Integrating health and social care: implications for joint working and community care outcomes for older people
Authors:Barbara Davey  Enid Levin  Steve Iliffe  Kalpa Kharicha
Affiliation:1. Nursing Research Unit King's College London;2. Social Care Institute for Excellence London &3. Department of Primary Care &4. Population Sciences Royal Free &5. UCL Medical School London
Abstract:In England, the theme of promoting collaborative working between social and primary health care remains high on the policy agenda. The underlying assumption, largely untested, is that a greater degree of structural integration benefits service users. This paper reports the findings from a feasibility study comparing two models of joint working and examining the relative impact of personal characteristics, service use and co-location on the likelihood of older people remaining in the community. Baseline standardised interviews with 79 older people aged 75?+ with complex needs in two social services departments were carried out following referral, covering social circumstances, physical and mental health and services received, with follow-up interviews after six months. Contacts between social workers and primary care were tracked. The findings suggest that co-location does not necessarily lead to substantially closer interprofessional working in terms of greater contact between social workers and GPs or social workers and community nurses. Factors affecting outcome were degree of cognitive impairment, intensity of home care received and whether the older person lived alone. Whatever the model of collaborative working, its effects on remaining in the community must be assessed in the wider context of the characteristics and services received by older people.
Keywords:Joint working  co-location  older people  social care  general practice  cognitive impairment
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号