Litcius/Paper detail

Integrated People-Centred Care in Canada – Policies, Standards, and Implementation Tools to Improve Outcomes

Patricia Sullivan-Taylor, Esther Suter, Samantha Laxton, Nelly D. Oelke, Emma Park

2022International Journal of Integrated Care27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: (IPCHS) National Standard of Canada (NSC) has been developed to help close this gap. This manuscript outlines the policy context and the process taken to develop the IPCHS standard. DESCRIPTION: The IPCHS standard is built around 10 design principles with detailed, action-oriented criteria and guidance for policy makers and health system partners. The IPCHS standard was co-designed with a technical committee that included balanced representation of policy makers, health system decision-makers, Indigenous leaders, providers, patients, caregivers, and academics. Additional feedback was received from a diverse audience during two public review periods and targeted consultation via interviews. This qualitative feedback, combined with the evidence reviews completed by the technical committee, informed the final content of the IPCHS standard. DISCUSSION: The IPCHS standard was developed through a co-design process and complements existing frameworks by providing 66 detailed, action-oriented criteria, with specific guidance. The co-design process and consultations resulted in increased awareness and capacity among policy makers and health system partners. Supplementary tools are also in development to facilitate implementation and monitoring of progress and outcomes. This manuscript was developed in collaboration with technical committee members and HSO staff who led the targeted consultation and adoption of the IPCHS standard in six integrated care networks. CONCLUSION: Implementing integration strategies requires that we create and sustain a culture of continuous improvement and learning. Key lessons from the development process focused on the importance of co-design, embedding people-centred practices throughout the standard, formal yet iterative methodology inclusive of broad consultation, clear accountability for both policy makers and system partners, tools that support action and can be adapted to local context and level of integrated system maturity.

Topics & Concepts

Integrated careHealth careProcess managementBusinessEngineering managementPolitical scienceEngineeringLawInterprofessional Education and CollaborationHealth Policy Implementation ScienceIndigenous Health, Education, and Rights