Author:
Charlier Nathan,Colman Elien,Alvarez Irusta Lucia,Anthierens Sibyl,Van Durme Thérèse,Macq Jean,Pétré Benoit
Abstract
The capacity of self-assessment, to learn from experience, to make information-based decisions, and to adapt over time are essential drivers of success for any project aiming at healthcare system change. Yet, many of those projects are managed by healthcare providers' teams with little evaluation capacity. In this article, we describe the support mission delivered by an interdisciplinary scientific team to 12 integrated care pilot projects in Belgium, mobilizing a set of tools and methods: a dashboard gathering population health indicators, a significant event reporting method, an annual report, and the development of a sustainable “learning community.” The article provides a reflexive return on the design and implementation of such interventions aimed at building organizational evaluation capacity. Some lessons were drawn from our experience, in comparison with the broader evaluation literature: The provided support should be adapted to the various needs and contexts of the beneficiary organizations, and it has to foster experience-based learning and requires all stakeholders to adopt a learning posture. A long-time, secure perspective should be provided for organizations, and the availability of data and other resources is an essential precondition for successful work.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference58 articles.
1. The triple aim: care, health, and cost;Berwick;Health Aff.,2008
2. From triple to quadruple aim: care of the patient requires care of the provider;Bodenheimer;Ann Family Med.,2014
3. MarmorvejWHO Regional Office for EuropeStrengthening People-Centred Health Systems in the WHO European Region: Framework for Action on Integrated Health Services Delivery2016
4. Values of integrated care: a systematic review;Zonneveld;Int J Integr Care,2018