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This is a plain English summary of an original research article. The views expressed are those of the author(s) and reviewer(s) at the time of publication.

New integrated care models can increase patient satisfaction, perceived quality of care and improve access to services. It is less clear whether there may be effects on hospital admissions, appointments or healthcare costs. Strong leadership and patient engagement are among factors influencing successful implementation.

The NHS is undergoing reconfiguration to better coordinate services around patients. This NIHR-funded review looked at the international literature to understand how new care models may affect patients, providers and systems. It included a qualitative review of attitudes, barriers and enablers of integration. Nearly half of the 267 studies came from the UK. Most investigated integrated care pathways, often as part of a multicomponent intervention including multidisciplinary teams and some form of case management. Most studies focused on older people.

The complexity and variability of interventions across the literature make it difficult to understand the effect of specific changes. Most studies were at risk of bias, with few comparison studies as these are often not appropriate for organisational research.

The review finds some positives, but overall highlights the complexity of implementing and assessing new models of care.

Why was this study needed?

The 2014 NHS Five Year Forward View emphasised the need for health and social care services that are coordinated around the patient, rather than being single, unconnected episodes of care. They outlined models for service reconfiguration, including Primary and Acute Care Systems (PACS), integrating secondary, primary and community services; and Multispecialty Community Providers (MCPs), integrating out-of-hospital care. Fifty vanguard sites have taken the lead in developing these models since 2014, with annual funding of over £100 million. Compared with 2014/15, PACS and MCP vanguards have seen lower growth in emergency hospital admissions (1.1% and 1.9%, respectively) compared with the rest of England (3.2%).

However, studies by The King’s Fund and others have highlighted challenges when implementing change, such as difficulties in engaging care providers or clarifying roles and responsibilities. This has led to variability in implementation. It is also unclear whether integrated care influences patient outcomes.

What did this study do?

This systematic review identified 267 pieces of literature from the UK and economically-similar countries, published from 2006 onwards, which analysed and described new models of integrated care. Almost half of the studies (118) came from the UK: 54 were interventional and 64 were qualitative.

The majority of UK (and international) studies examined integrated care pathways, followed by multidisciplinary teams and case management. Interventions had four main elements of focus: patient care, service reconfiguration, workforce changes, or financial or governance aspects.

The researchers used a logic model framework to examine what the benefits of integration might be and the mechanisms for achieving these outcomes.

Many initiatives were complex and only briefly described. All UK studies had potential for bias. Only 16 had high quality comparison design: two were randomised, and participants or assessors unaware of allocation in only four and five studies, respectively. However, this perhaps reflects the difficulties of evaluating complex system changes.

What did it find?

  • Quality of care. Nine of 12 UK interventional studies and four of seven qualitative studies found that integrated care, delivered across variable conditions and services, improved patient satisfaction. Four studies assessing staff-perceived quality of care all reported that this improved.
    There was similarly strong evidence of improved patient satisfaction and perceived quality of care from systematic reviews. All 10 UK studies assessing waiting times (for example, for admission or appointments) consistently reported that this had improved, and all six studies reporting access to services similarly found improvements. There was some evidence from three UK studies that integrated care increased likelihood of meeting patient preferences (specifically about place of death in end-of-life care).
  • Effect on resources. Fifteen of 21 UK studies found that integrated care reduced length of hospital stay. Four of these studies were high quality and most related to community-dwelling older adults. All six studies assessing number of outpatient appointments reported a reduction. Findings were more mixed for scheduled and unscheduled admissions, readmissions, emergency department attendance, frequency of clinician contact, or number of GP appointments. International studies similarly found inconsistent or limited evidence for resource use.
  • System impact. There was no clear evidence that integrated care reduced healthcare costs. Of 12 UK studies assessing overall cost of healthcare provision, only five found a reduction (of which one was qualitative), one showed it increased costs, and the remainder found no change. Three UK studies assessing secondary care costs provided found some evidence for a reduction, but three of four studies assessing community care studies found that costs increased. Systematic reviews and international studies similarly found inconsistent evidence on healthcare costs.
  • Factors influencing implementation. Common workforce-related barriers to implementation reported across UK studies were established hierarchies, professional identity and organisational culture, and difficulties with changed boundaries of professional roles.
    Studies emphasised that training in the new model was essential, in addition to communication between staff with a better understanding of different roles.
    Effective leadership (for example, local champions), clear vision and effective IT systems were among those highlighted as strong enabling factors.
    Many studies also emphasised the importance of patient involvement when developing and implementing new care models.

What does current guidance say on this issue?

The NHS Five Year Forward View (2014) highlighted the need for services to be integrated around patients. In addition to PACs and MCPs as previously described, three other vanguard types have been introduced:

  • Acute Care Collaborations, linking hospitals to improve their clinical and financial stability
  • Urgent and Emergency Care services, to better integrate A&E, GP out-of-hours, urgent care centres and ambulance services
  • Enhanced Health in Care Homes, providing older adults with coordinated health, care and rehabilitation services

NICE guidance is available in specific areas, including the organisation of emergency care services, transition between hospital and community, and comprehensive care for frail older adults.

There are different contexts in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland which have had a longer experience of integrated care across different health sectors and across health and social care settings.

What are the implications?

It is promising to find strong evidence that integrated care models can improve patient satisfaction and perceived quality of care. However, on the whole, the complexity of interventions make it difficult to conclude the effects on individual people’s health, and healthcare systems and resources.

The challenges of implementing and evaluating new care models may be worthy of further evaluation.

Different elements are considered in this international review, from multidisciplinary teams to shared budgets and services. As the authors suggest, further study needs to identify the specific elements of new care models that affect outcomes.

Citation and Funding

Baxter S, Johnson M, Chambers D et al. Understanding new models of integrated care in developed countries: a systematic review. Health Serv Deliv Res. 2018;6(29).

This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research Programme (project number 15/77/10).

 

Bibliography

The King’s Fund. Integrated care in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales. London: The King’s Fund; 2013.

NHS England. NHS Five Year Forward View. London: NHS England; 2014.

NHS England. Next steps on the NHS Five Year Forward View. London: NHS England; 2017.

NHS England. Models of care. London: NHS England; 2016.

Produced by the University of Southampton and Bazian on behalf of NIHR through the NIHR Dissemination Centre

 

NIHR Evidence is covered by the creative commons, CC-BY licence. Written content and infographics may be freely reproduced provided that suitable acknowledgement is made. Note, this licence excludes comments and images made by third parties, audiovisual content, and linked content on other websites.

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