Wednesday, June 5, 2019
Managing Multi-Agency Working in Elderly Care
Managing Multi-Agency functional in Elderly CareManaging Collaboration Multi-Agency Working for older peoples servicesExecutive summary and introductionCollaboration in the field of two wel uttermoste and health anguish, on one level, sack up be expedient, efficient and economical. On a nonher, more practical level, it can be a minefield of legislative, practical and interpersonal difficulties. (Arblaster. L. et al 1998)This report will consider these aspects in direct rumination of collaboration of the various aspects of care related to the elderly.It has to be viewed as being indoors the spirit and the legislative restriction of the NHS innovation (DOH 2000) and therefore considers the methods of collaboration with the PCTs in some detail, and also in the spirit and legislative requirements of the National Service model for the elderly. (Rouse et al 2001)What is collaboration amidst organisations?The transition from the concept Empire culture to the seamless port cultu re is effectively based on the concept of practical and effective collaboration. (Powell, J. Lovelock, R. 1996)The changes that were proposed in a number of recent pieces of welfare based code (after the 1993 changes in the community care organisation and the National Service Frame plant life to quote just two), have all espo employ collaboration as their raison dtre. Clearly, in attachment of the elderly, there are numerous organisations that can potentially collaborate (Appendix Two), and all have their strengths, weaknesses and pitfalls. Let us examine one important area as an illustration.If we consider the welfare/health service interface. Primary healthcare aggroups control access to secondary and community health services through enduring referrals. genial Services equally manage funding for home care and residential services including nursing home facilities and control access through assessment and care management. (Glendenning C et al 1998).When it is the case that, in terms of professional organisations, one depends upon another for access to services, their ability to obtain their own organisational or professional objectives can be severely compromised. (Haralambos M et al 2000).In practical terms, the GP is dependent on the affectionate services to fund the prehend facility whether it is a nursing home, domicillary enhancement services to keep a patient out of an acute medical hospital bed, or other course of instructions of kind support to relieve the timely discharge of a patient from hospital. The arguments for collaboration are so overwhelmingly obvious that they hardly need repeating here.In real terms, the consideration of collaboration among organisations more analytically hinges on the question, which organisations?. The example that we have given is a fairly common collaboration and is therefore enshrined in both common working practice and also with legislative and regulatory boundaries. The advent of the National Service Fr ameworks have helped go on commonly recognised goals and objectives across the health/welfare spectrum of care, although a number of pecuniary issues and problems with the organisational culture interface can commonly difficulty in everyday practice (Wierzbicki Reynolds 2001).Other organisations have to mediate and collaborate with the Social Services Dept. such as local and national voluntary support groups and specialist interest support groups, (often disease sue based,) and these principally have much looser procedural issues and practices which may need different considerations. We shall discuss these in greater depth elsewhere in this essay.What are the problems?Taking a broad overview of the scope and possible nature of collaborative enterprises. Problems can arise from a number of organisational areas. Financial considerations, especially financial accountability, cause problems when this eventuality has not specifically been legislated for. Appendix Three sets out man y of the potential pitfalls in this area. We observe that the health based services are essentially free to the patient whereas Welfare is largely means tested and thereby rendered vulnerable to changes of political direction and sign onure. (Audit commission 2004)Another major area of potential difficulty stems from the diachronic development of professional language, terminology and working practices that each collaboration can interface. Client, patient , in need, deserving, dependent all are terms frequently used by various healthcare professionals, but with different interpretations and nuances of meaning. Collaboration will inevitably require a more exact and specific vocabulary to be evolved and agreed. (Garlick C 1996).Collaboration inevitably means information sharing. The Empire concepts and constructs take a spacious time to die and be eradicated, but the seamless interface can only realistically be expected to work if all available information is shared. This raises serious problems of confidentiality if information is expected to be shared amid healthcare professionals and collaborating agencies from the voluntary sector for example. (Cameron,A et al 2000).What are the solutions?Management solutions can be both complex and difficult to introduce or impose. By virtue of the potentially disparate nature of the collaborative partnerships that we are considering, there is clearly no one size fits all solution. It is for this reason that general principles are more useful than specific suggestions.The management of change (and therefore the solutions) is perhaps the most fundamental element in the discussion. Visions, ideas and directions are of little value if they cannot be translated into reality. (Bennis et al 1999).We can turn to the writings of Marinker (1997) who points to the fact that systems change, and indeed change management itself, are responsive to the acceptance of a division between concordance and compliance. wad principally r espond better to suggestion, reason and coercion rather than imposition of regulations and arbitrary change. The models that rely on publication and dissemination of information are generally more likely to be well received and more fully implemented, particularly if it is peer driven. (Shortell SM et al 1998)This is perfectly illustrated by the Davidmann Report (Davidmann 1988) on the debacle of the introduction of the Griffiths Reforms in the 80s.(Griffiths Report 1983). His major findings were that the Reforms failed because changes were imposed rather than managedCollaborative solutions should only realistically be made after a elaborated consideration of the evidence base underpinning that proposed change. (Berwick D 2005).Modern management theory calls for appropriate evaluation of the need for collaborative proposals by considering the evidence base on which the situation could be improved, its implementation by making managers aware of the need for change and proactively en couraging them in the means of implementation, and then instituting a review process to evaluate the effectiveness of the measures when they have been in place. (Berwick D. 1996) (Appendix five)Models of CollaborationThere are a great many models of professional collaboration cited in the literature. In ordinate to make an illustrated analysis, we will return to the specific example of the Health/welfare interface to consider some of the models in that area. In general terms, all of the models exist the functional structure Plan, Implement and Review (expanded in Appendix Five).The Outreach (or Outposting) model appears to be a commonly adopted model (McNally D et al. 1996), whereby a social worker is prone to a primary healthcare team. In terms of our analytical assessment here we should note that such ar weavements, if subjected to process evaluation, generally promote progression towards a seamless interface in areas such asThe sharing of information and in mutual understand ing of the different professional roles, responsibilities, and organisational frameworks within which social and primary health services are delivered.It is also noted that such benefits are generally greater if the implementation of such models is preceded by exercises including team building or joint training exercises. (Pithouse A et al 1996)Other models include the Joint Needs Assessments model in which service direction between primary health and social services teams have a common assessment base (Wistow G et al. 1998). This does not appear to have been as self-made as the outreach model, and has had a rather variable history (Booth T 1999).Collaboration here has involved a variable number of agencies but not unendingly the primary healthcare teams. The new primary care groups will have a strategic role in the commissioning of a broad range of health and welfare services. All NHS organisations have a clear imposed duty of collaboration and partnership with the local authori ties (NHSE 1997)Collaboration in the form of joint commissioning models have also been tried. They tend to fall into one of three patterns includingArea or locality as basis for joint commissioningJoint commissioning at practice levelJoint commissioning at patient levelNone have been in place for long enough for a realistic assessment of their relative strengths and weaknesses to be evaluated yet. (Glendenning C et al 1998)Models- Interprofessional/teamsOne of the more prospered models of collaboration is that of the multidisciplinary pre-discharge assessment team which, when it works well, can be considered a model of good collaborative working (Richards et al 1998). This requires all of the elements referred to above to be successfully implemented and to be in place if the optimum result for the client is to be obtained. Such a model calls for professional integration and collaboration of the highest order if National Service Framework Standard Two is to be fully realised. The fr amework calls for all concerned professionals toEnsure that older people are treated as individuals and that they receive appropriate and timely packages of care which meet their needs as individuals, regardless of health and social services boundaries.It is, in our estimation, the crossing of these boundaries that, perhaps, is the key to collaboration.ReviewCollaboration as a concept is comparatively easy to define. Any dictionary will give a reasonable definition. As a workable model of practice, it is far more nebulous and hard to achieve. In this review we have tried to consider the barriers and management problems that make it harder to achieve together with the mechanisms which will militate towards successful implementation.We have identified financial and cultural barriers, as well as structural and organisational ones equally we have pointed towards models of collaboration which appear to be working well. It would appear to be the case that the prime factor in the success o r ultimate failure of a collaborative exercise, is the success and management skills with which it is initially introduced.ReferencesArblaster. L. et al (1998)Achieving the impossible interagency collaboration to address the housing, health and social care needs of people able to live in ordinary housingBristol Policy press and Joseph Rowntree. 1998Audit commission (2004)Older People Independence and well-being The challenge for public servicesLondon The Audit Commission 2004Bennis, Benne Chin (Eds.) 1999The plan of Change (2nd Edition)..Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York 1999.Berwick D. 1996A primer on the improvement of systems.BMJ 1996 312 619-622Berwick D 2005 Broadening the view of evidence-based medicine Qual. Saf. Health Care, Oct 2005 14 315 316.Booth T. 1999Collaboration between health and social services a case study of joint care planning.Policy Polit 1999 19 23-49.Cameron,A. Brown H and Eby,M.A. (2000)Factors Promoting and Obstacles Hindering Joint WorkingSchool f or Policy Studies, Bristol. 2000Davidmann 1988Reorganising the National Health Service An Evaluation of the Griffiths ReportHMSO London 1988DOH 2000Department of Health (2000)The NHS Plan. A Plan for Investment. A Plan for Reform. Cm 4818.London The Stationery OfficeGarlick C. 1996Social solution.Nurs Times 1996 92 28.Glendenning C. Rummery K, Clarke R 1998From collaboration to commissioning developing relationships between primary health and social servicesBMJ 1998317122-125Griffiths Report 1983NHS Management Inquiry Report DHSS, 1983 Oct 25Haralambos M, M Holborn 2000Sociology themes and perspectives,Harper Collins 2000.Marinker M.1997From compliance to concordance achieving shared goalsBMJ 19973147478.McNally D Mercer N. 1996Social workers attached to practices. Project report. 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(eds), Educating for Social Work Arguments for Optimism,Aldershot, Avebury, pp. 7694.Richards, Joanna Coast, David J Gunnell, Tim J Peters, John Pounsford, and Mary-Anne Darlow 1998 Randomised controlled trial comparison effectiveness and acceptability of an early discharge, hospital at home scheme with acute hospital care BMJ, Jun 1998 316 1796 1801Rouse, Jolley, and Read 2001 National service frameworks BMJ, Dec 2001 323 1429.Shortell SM, Bennett CL, Byck GR. 1998Assessing the bear on of continuous quality improvement on clinical practice what will it take to accelerate progress?Milbank Quarterly 1998 76 593-624Wierzbicki and Reynolds 2001 National service frameworks financial implications are huge BM J, Sep 2001 321 705.Wistow G, Brookes T, eds.1998Joint planning and joint management. ,London Royal Institute for Public Affairs, 1998.25.1.06 PDG Word count 2,290
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