Litcius/Paper detail

Broadening the scope of task shifting in the organisation of healthcare

L. van Tuyl, Hubertus JM Vrijhoef, Miranda Laurant, Antoinette de Bont, Ronald Batenburg

2021International Journal of Care Coordination20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Task shifting in healthcare has mainly been initiated and studied as a way to react to/or mitigate workforce shortages. Here, we define task shifting as the structural redistribution of tasks, usually including responsibilities and competencies between different professions. As such, task shifting is commonly focused on highly specialised and trained professionals who hand-over specific, standardised tasks to professionals with lower levels of education. It is expected that this type of task shifting will lead to efficiency and cost savings to healthcare organisations. Yet, there are more benefits to task shifting, in particular its contribution to integrated patient-centred quality of care and a tailored system that meets the changing care demands in society. Hence the importance to broaden the scope of task shifting, its goals, manifestations and how task shifting plays a role in addressing both the strengths and weaknesses in the healthcare system. In this focus piece, trends and conditions for task shifting and its (un)anticipated effects are discussed. We argue that, only when designed to face specific complexities at the workplace and taking into account the balance between specialists and generalists, task shifting may substantially contribute to enhanced quality of care that meets the changing needs of society.

Topics & Concepts

Task (project management)Scope (computer science)Health careScope of practiceWorkforceQuality (philosophy)Public relationsEconomic shortageBusinessKnowledge managementPsychologyComputer sciencePolitical scienceEconomic growthManagementEconomicsProgramming languageLinguisticsGovernment (linguistics)PhilosophyEpistemologyNursing Roles and PracticesGlobal Health Workforce IssuesPrimary Care and Health Outcomes