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Bmc Health Serv Res · Jun 2014
A qualitative analysis of information sharing for children with medical complexity within and across health care organizations.
- Laura Quigley, Ashley Lacombe-Duncan, Sherri Adams, Charlotte Moore Hepburn, and Eyal Cohen.
- Division of Paediatric Medicine and Child Health Evaluative Sciences, The Hospital for Sick Children, 555 University Avenue, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada. eyal.cohen@sickkids.ca.
- Bmc Health Serv Res. 2014 Jun 30; 14: 283.
BackgroundChildren with medical complexity (CMC) are characterized by substantial family-identified service needs, chronic and severe conditions, functional limitations, and high health care use. Information exchange is critically important in high quality care of complex patients at high risk for poor care coordination. Written care plans for CMC are an excellent test case for how well information sharing is currently occurring. The purpose of this study was to identify the barriers to and facilitators of information sharing for CMC across providers, care settings, and families.MethodsA qualitative study design with data analysis informed by a grounded theory approach was utilized. Two independent coders conducted secondary analysis of interviews with parents of CMC and health care professionals involved in the care of CMC, collected from two studies of healthcare service delivery for this population. Additional interviews were conducted with privacy officers of associated organizations to supplement these data. Emerging themes related to barriers and facilitators to information sharing were identified by the two coders and the research team, and a theory of facilitators and barriers to information exchange evolved.ResultsBarriers to information sharing were related to one of three major themes; 1) the lack of an integrated, accessible, secure platform on which summative health care information is stored, 2) fragmentation of the current health system, and 3) the lack of consistent policies, standards, and organizational priorities across organizations for information sharing. Facilitators of information sharing were related to improving accessibility to a common document, expanding the use of technology, and improving upon a structured communication plan.ConclusionsFindings informed a model of how various barriers to information sharing interact to prevent optimal information sharing both within and across organizations and how the use of technology to improve communication and access to information can act as a solution.
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