1. Queensland Health nurse navigator evaluation. Progress report: October 2020
- Author
-
Harvey, Clare, Heritage, Brody, Forrest, Rachel, Desley Hegney, Willis, Eileen, Amy-Louise Byrne, Baldwin, Adele, Brown, Janie, Heard, David, Palmer, Janine, Brain, David, Judd, Jennifer, Mclellan, Sandra, Ferguson, Bridget, and Thompson, Shona
- Subjects
111003 Clinical Nursing: Secondary (Acute Care) ,111002 Clinical Nursing: Primary (Preventative) ,FOS: Health sciences - Abstract
This report identified the emergent success of the navigators in improving the care of people living with multiple chronic conditions. These results are achieved through the delivery of person-centred care, evidenced by an ongoing improvement of patients’ self-reported wellbeing and self-management of their illness alongside indicative cost savings resulting from a reduction in unnecessary hospital admissions. Navigators are not new; however, there is a paucity of literature that identifies the role of nurses as navigators in the co-ordination of multimorbid conditions. Therefore, the Queensland navigators are novel. Furthermore, their uniqueness lies is in the diversity of the context within which they work, particularly regarding disparate geographic regions and cultural diversity. These factors add to the challenges that navigators face in supporting patients to achieve effective access to multiple levels of health service delivery and numerous specialist services involved in their care.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF