392 results on '"Service integration"'
Search Results
2. Factors influencing provider deviation from national HIV and nutritional guidelines for HIV-exposed children in western Kenya: a qualitative study
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Megan M. Coe, Emily Yoshioka, Damaris Odhiambo, Mary Masheti, Phlona Amam, Julius Nyaoke, Emmanuel Oduor, Marline Serede, Agnes Ndirangu, Benson Singa, and Arianna Rubin Means
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HIV Exposed Infants ,Nutrition ,Qualitative Research ,Kenya ,Theoretical Domains Framework ,Service integration ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Malnutrition and HIV interact in a vicious cycle for HIV-exposed infants (HEIs), increasing vulnerability and the severity of each condition and contributing to poor health outcomes. We identified multi-level factors influencing provider adherence to Kenyan HIV and nutrition guidelines for HEIs. Methods We conducted six focus group discussions and seven in-depth interviews using a semi-structured question guide. Participants were selected through purposive maximum variation sampling of health workers involved in maternal and child health services and outpatient nutrition programs at two facilities in western Kenya. Data collection and analysis were guided by the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF). Transcripts were coded by two primary coders using both deductive and inductive thematic analysis. Results TDF domains that drove guideline adherence included: environmental context and resources, beliefs about capabilities, and social influences. While participants praised attempts to integrate HIV and nutritional services through teamwork and service colocation, challenges in the successful referral of patients between services persisted. Participants described siloed HIV and nutrition-related knowledge across staff, leading to missed or delayed care if certain providers were unavailable. Participants emphasized understaffing as a major contributor to gaps in care. Inconsistent material resource availability also disrupted linkages between HIV and nutrition services for patients. While participants frequently expressed high intention and internal motivation to link children between services, they described minimal structured supervision or positive reinforcement from supervisors and feeling demoralized when resource constraints interfered with care provision. Lastly, participants described patient-level factors that made it challenging for families to seek or remain in care, including poverty and HIV and malnutrition-related stigma. Participants made several recommendations, including training multiple cadres in the fundamentals of both HIV and nutritional care to address siloed services and understaffing. Conclusions This study details the factors that facilitate or hinder health workers as they implement national guidelines and link HEIs between HIV and nutritional services, including the impact of physical integration of service sites, human and material resource constraints, and health worker motivation. Future interventions can address these challenges by expanding access to needed resources, task sharing, and testing implementation strategies that increase the efficiency of service delivery to improve linkages in care for vulnerable infants.
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- 2024
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3. Collaboration between information exchange between physiotherapists in primary and specialist health services – a systematic coproduction
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Ingeborg Marie Hegland Thorsen, Berit Hagemoen Linberg, and Anne Marit Mengshoel
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coproduction ,participatory action research ,communication ,discharge summary ,service integration ,implementation ,evaluation ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Purpose: It appears to be inadequate communication and a lack of information transfer between physiotherapists in the specialist (SH) and primary health services (PH). This project aimed to develop and test recommendations for the content of discharge summaries and routines to improve communication. Method: A working group was established with physiotherapists from SH and PH with diverse backgrounds and areas of responsibility. Through co-production, they developed templates with recommendations for the content of discharge summaries. These templates were tested in practice and evaluated by clinicians. Findings: Challenges and expectations were revealed in the interaction between physiotherapists in SH and PH. Each topic was discussed, resulting in the creation of discharge summary templates, along with guidelines for their use. The results showed that the discharge summary templates contributed to a more comprehensive service. However, several physiotherapists reported that differences in digital solutions were a major challenge. Conclusion: Our experience indicates that co-production can be a useful method for identifying and highlighting clinical challenges, generating new understandings, ideas and a sense of ownership, and applicable solutions for clinical practice. We believe that the template can be used by physiotherapists with similar needs.
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- 2024
4. Networking community health workers for service integration: role of social media
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Li, Li, Lin, Chunqing, Pham, Loc Quang, Nguyen, Diep Bich, and Le, Tuan Anh
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Public Health ,Social Work ,Health Sciences ,Human Society ,Health Services ,Social Determinants of Health ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,Women's Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Infectious Diseases ,Humans ,Social Media ,Community Health Workers ,HIV Infections ,Vietnam ,Communication ,Networking ,community health worker ,service integration ,social media ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Public health ,Sociology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Community health workers (CHW) can play an active role in providing integrated HIV and harm reduction services. We used social media to create a virtual network among Vietnamese CHW. This paper reports CHW's social media engagement and the relationships with other work-related indicators. Sixty CHW participated in an intervention for integrated HIV/drug use service delivery. Following two in-person sessions, Facebook groups were established for CHW to share information, seek consultation, and refer patients. CHW's levels of online engagements were tracked for six months and linked to their service provision confidence, interaction with patients and other providers, and job satisfaction. The CHW made 181 posts, which received 557 comments and 1,607 reactions during the six months. Among the 60 CHW, 22 (36.6%) had three or more posts, 19 (31.7%) had one or two posts, and 19 (31.7%) had no post. Comparing the baseline and 6-month follow-up data, we observed that those who posted three or more times showed better service provision confidence (p = 0.0081), more interaction with providers in other settings (p = 0.0071), and higher job satisfaction (p = 0.0268). Our study suggests using social media to engage CHW in virtual communications to improve service provision in communities.
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- 2023
5. Responsible coordination of municipal health and care services for individuals with serious mental illness: a participatory qualitative study with service users and professionals
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Jorunn Nærland Skjærpe, Tatiana Aleksandrovna Iakovleva, and Marianne Storm
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Service integration ,Primary health care ,Mental healthcare ,Service providers ,Qualitative design ,Innovation ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Care coordination is crucial to ensure the health of individuals with serious mental illness. The aim of this study was to describe and analyze an inclusive innovation process for coordinating municipal health and care services for individuals with serious mental illness. Methods We conducted café dialogues with professionals and service users with serious mental illness. The café dialogues engaged participants in conversation and knowledge exchange about care coordination, adressing topics of efficiency, challenges, and improvement. We used a responsible innovation framework to analyze the innovation process. Results Responsible coordination requires promoting service users’ health and ensuring communication and mutual awareness between professionals. Individual-level factors supporting responsible coordination included service users knowing their assigned professionals, personalized healthcare services, and access to meaningful activities. Provider-level factors included effective coordination routines, communication, information exchange, and professional familiarity. Results reflect professionals’ and service users’ perspectives on efficient care coordination, existing challenges, and measures to improve care coordination. Conclusion Café dialogues are an inclusive, participatory method that can produce insights into the responsible coordination of municipal health and care services for individuals with serious mental illness. The responsible innovation framework is helpful in identifying care coordination challenges and measures for responsible coordination.
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- 2024
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6. Social Community Teams' Creation of Service Integration Through Boundary Work and Play with Their Stakeholders.
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Slagter, Martian, Van Offenbeek, Marjolein, and Broekhuis, Manda
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COMMUNITY health services , *SOCIAL workers , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *PROFESSIONAL ethics , *HUMAN services programs , *RESEARCH funding , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIAL services , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *GOAL (Psychology) , *PROFESSIONS , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *STAKEHOLDER analysis , *SOCIAL boundaries , *CASE studies , *INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
In many European countries, responsibilities for social care have been shifted to municipalities to enhance accessibility and stimulate integration of care and social services, and to cut costs. Multidisciplinary local Social Community Teams (SCTs) have become increasingly responsible for the provision of these integrated services, requiring them to collaborate with local health and societal organisations. To collaborate and to integrate services the SCTs must work across their own and stakeholders' boundaries (e.g., domain specific boundaries). We investigated how boundary work in SCTs' practices contributes to service integration in a dynamic multi-stakeholder context. In our embedded case study, for 18 months, we followed three SCTs in their efforts to integrate services, and used data from multiple sources, including bi-weekly questionnaires in which SCT members reflect on their stakeholder-directed goal achievements. The case analysis yielded four takeaways. First, it demonstrates how SCTs' bottom-up formulation of a long-term service integration vision brought internal coherence (boundary reinforcement), while the short-term action-goals increased collaboration with stakeholders (boundary spanning). Second, only SCTs that managed to incorporate constraints into their action-goals and practices, and to span and play with boundaries, continued with integrating services just-by-doing. Third, two stakeholder characteristics facilitated the SCTs' boundary spanning: well-organized stakeholders and prior familiarity with the stakeholder. Fourth, a new boundary work type emerged, "boundary play", consisting of informal, experimental collaboration efforts with stakeholders contributing to emergent service integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Connecting RDM Services
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Jürgen Windeck, Max Schröder, Johannes Frenzel, Stefan Kusmierz, Hannes Fuchs, and Jochen Klar
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Data management plan ,RDMO ,service integration ,plugins ,hackathon ,Interoperability ,Technology - Abstract
The Research Data Management Organiser (RDMO) supports researchers in the creation of data management plans (DMPs). The open source software has established itself widely across Germany as the standard DMP tool. For its broader adoption, integration with other services for research data management is key. In this paper we reflect on the potential of RDMO on this issue, we explain its adaptiveness by design, its plugin architecture, and report on the first RDMO Hackathon organized in Darmstadt in Aug 2023 which focussed on the integration of RDMO via plugins. We present three extensions and plugins developed during the hackathon: 1.) a JSON-editor for RDMO data transfer and mapping, 2.) an RO-crate export plugin, 3.) a sensor database option set plugin.
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- 2024
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8. Factors influencing integration of mental health screening and treatment at HIV clinic settings in Cameroon: a qualitative study of health providers’ perspectives
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Kathryn E. L. Grimes, Peter Vanes Ebasone, Anastase Dzudie, Denis Nash, Milton L Wainberg, Brian W. Pence, Clare Barrington, Eric Pefura, Marcel Yotebieng, Kathryn Anastos, Denis Nsame, Rogers Ajeh, Annereke Nyenti, and Angela M. Parcesepe
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HIV ,Mental health ,Health providers ,Service integration ,Cameroon ,Qualitative research ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Mental disorders are common among people with HIV (PWH) and are associated with poor HIV outcomes. Despite high unmet mental health needs among PWH, use of evidence-based mental health screening and treatment protocols remains limited at HIV treatment facilities across low-resource settings. Integrating mental health services into HIV care can reduce this gap. This study’s objective was to explore factors that influence integration of mental health screening and treatment into HIV clinics in Cameroon. Methods We analyzed 14 in-depth interviews with clinic staff supporting PWH at three urban HIV treatment clinics in Cameroon. Interviews focused on current processes, barriers and facilitators, and types of support needed to integrate mental health care into HIV care. Interviews were recorded and transcribed. French transcripts were translated into English. We used thematic analysis to identify factors that influence integration of mental health screening and treatment into HIV care in these settings. Ethical review boards in the United States and Cameroon approved this study. Results Respondents discussed a lack of standardized mental health screening processes in HIV treatment facilities and generally felt ill-equipped to conduct mental health screening. Low community awareness about mental disorders, mental health-related stigma, limited physical space, and high clinic volume affected providers’ ability to screen clients for mental disorders. Providers indicated that better coordination and communication were needed to support client referral to mental health care. Despite these barriers, providers were motivated to screen clients for mental disorders and believed that mental health service provision could improve quality of HIV care and treatment outcomes. All providers interviewed said they would feel more confident screening for mental disorders with additional training and resources. Providers recommended community sensitization, training or hiring additional staff, improved coordination to manage referrals, and leadership buy-in at multiple levels of the health system to support sustainable integration of mental health screening and treatment into HIV clinics in Cameroon. Conclusions Providers reported enthusiasm to integrate mental health services into HIV care but need more support and training to do so in an effective and sustainable manner.
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- 2024
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9. Scaling-up and scaling-out the Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach to optimize the hypertension diagnosis and care cascade for HIV infected individuals (SCALE SAIA-HTN): a stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial
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Carmen E. Hazim, Igor Dobe, Stephen Pope, Kristjana H. Ásbjörnsdóttir, Orvalho Augusto, Fernando Pereira Bruno, Sergio Chicumbe, Norberto Lumbandali, Inocêncio Mate, Elso Ofumhan, Sam Patel, Riaze Rafik, Kenneth Sherr, Veronica Tonwe, Onei Uetela, David Watkins, Sarah Gimbel, and Ana O. Mocumbi
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Systems analysis and improvement approach (SAIA) ,Hypertension ,HIV ,Service integration ,RE-AIM ,CFIR ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Undiagnosed and untreated hypertension is a main driver of cardiovascular disease and disproportionately affects persons living with HIV (PLHIV) in low- and middle-income countries. Across sub-Saharan Africa, guideline application to screen and manage hypertension among PLHIV is inconsistent due to poor service readiness, low health worker motivation, and limited integration of hypertension screening and management within HIV care services. In Mozambique, where the adult HIV prevalence is over 13%, an estimated 39% of adults have hypertension. As the only scaled chronic care service in the county, the HIV treatment platform presents an opportunity to standardize and scale hypertension care services. Low-cost, multi-component systems-level strategies such as the Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach (SAIA) have been found effective at integrating hypertension and HIV services to improve the effectiveness of hypertension care delivery for PLHIV, reduce drop-offs in care, and improve service quality. To build off lessons learned from a recently completed cluster randomized trial (SAIA-HTN) and establish a robust evidence base on the effectiveness of SAIA at scale, we evaluated a scaled-delivery model of SAIA (SCALE SAIA-HTN) using existing district health management structures to facilitate SAIA across six districts of Maputo Province, Mozambique. Methods This study employs a stepped-wedge design with randomization at the district level. The SAIA strategy will be “scaled up” with delivery by district health supervisors (rather than research staff) and will be “scaled out” via expansion to Southern Mozambique, to 18 facilities across six districts in Maputo Province. SCALE SAIA-HTN will be introduced over three, 9-month waves of intensive intervention, where technical support will be provided to facilities and district managers by study team members from the Mozambican National Institute of Health. Our evaluation of SCALE SAIA-HTN will be guided by the RE-AIM framework and will seek to estimate the budget impact from the payer’s perspective. Discussion SAIA packages user-friendly systems engineering tools to support decision-making by frontline health workers and to identify low-cost, contextually relevant improvement strategies. By integrating SAIA delivery into routine management structures, this pragmatic trial will determine an effective strategy for national scale-up and inform program planning. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05002322 (registered 02/15/2023).
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- 2024
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10. Improving Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis Through Service Integration, Policy Enhancement, and Health Informatics
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Yacoub Abuzied, Ahmad Deeb, Layla AlAnizy, Rasmieh Al-Amer, and Mohammed AlSheef
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policy enhancement ,service integration ,health informatics ,vte ,prophylaxis ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Introduction Venous thromboembolism (VTE) prevention and management are susceptible issues that require specific rules to sustain and oversee their functioning, as preventing VTE is a vital patient safety priority. This paper aims to investigate and provide recommendations for VTE assessment and reassessment through policy enhancement and development. Methods We reviewed different papers and policies to propose recommendations and theme analysis for policy modifications and enhancements to improve VTE prophylaxis and management. Results Recommendations were set to enhance the overall work of VTE prophylaxis, where the current VTE protocols and policies must ensure high levels of patient safety and satisfaction. The recommendations included working through a well-organized multidisciplinary team and staff engagement to support and enhance VTE’s work. Nurses’, pharmacists’, and physical therapists’ involvement in setting up the plan and prevention is the way to share the knowledge and paradigm of experience to standardize the management. Promoting policies regarding VTE prophylaxis assessment and reassessment using electronic modules as a part of the digital health process was proposed. A deep understanding of the underlying issues and the incorporation of generic policy recommendations were set. Conclusion This article presents recommendations for stakeholders, social media platforms, and healthcare practitioners to enhance VTE prophylaxis and management.
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- 2024
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11. What are the priorities for improving quality for community pharmacy professional services? Nominal group technique discussions with multiple stakeholders
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Hindi, Ali M. K., Schafheutle, Ellen I., and Campbell, Stephen M.
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- 2024
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12. Availability and readiness of health facilities providing services for other infectious diseases to treat neglected tropical diseases in Ethiopia: implications for service integration in high burden areas
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Asmamaw, Getahun, Minwagaw, Tefera, Samuel, Mastewal, and Ayenew, Wondim
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- 2024
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13. Factors influencing integration of mental health screening and treatment at HIV clinic settings in Cameroon: a qualitative study of health providers' perspectives.
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Grimes, Kathryn E. L., Ebasone, Peter Vanes, Dzudie, Anastase, Nash, Denis, Wainberg, Milton L, Pence, Brian W., Barrington, Clare, Pefura, Eric, Yotebieng, Marcel, Anastos, Kathryn, Nsame, Denis, Ajeh, Rogers, Nyenti, Annereke, and Parcesepe, Angela M.
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MENTAL health screening ,MENTAL health services ,RESOURCE-limited settings ,HIV ,MEDICAL care ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
Background: Mental disorders are common among people with HIV (PWH) and are associated with poor HIV outcomes. Despite high unmet mental health needs among PWH, use of evidence-based mental health screening and treatment protocols remains limited at HIV treatment facilities across low-resource settings. Integrating mental health services into HIV care can reduce this gap. This study's objective was to explore factors that influence integration of mental health screening and treatment into HIV clinics in Cameroon. Methods: We analyzed 14 in-depth interviews with clinic staff supporting PWH at three urban HIV treatment clinics in Cameroon. Interviews focused on current processes, barriers and facilitators, and types of support needed to integrate mental health care into HIV care. Interviews were recorded and transcribed. French transcripts were translated into English. We used thematic analysis to identify factors that influence integration of mental health screening and treatment into HIV care in these settings. Ethical review boards in the United States and Cameroon approved this study. Results: Respondents discussed a lack of standardized mental health screening processes in HIV treatment facilities and generally felt ill-equipped to conduct mental health screening. Low community awareness about mental disorders, mental health-related stigma, limited physical space, and high clinic volume affected providers' ability to screen clients for mental disorders. Providers indicated that better coordination and communication were needed to support client referral to mental health care. Despite these barriers, providers were motivated to screen clients for mental disorders and believed that mental health service provision could improve quality of HIV care and treatment outcomes. All providers interviewed said they would feel more confident screening for mental disorders with additional training and resources. Providers recommended community sensitization, training or hiring additional staff, improved coordination to manage referrals, and leadership buy-in at multiple levels of the health system to support sustainable integration of mental health screening and treatment into HIV clinics in Cameroon. Conclusions: Providers reported enthusiasm to integrate mental health services into HIV care but need more support and training to do so in an effective and sustainable manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Editorial: Evidence on the benefits of integrating mental health and HIV into packages of essential services and care
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Olumide Abiodun, Theddeus Iheanacho, and Saheed Akinmayowa Lawal
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mental health ,HIV ,service integration ,health outcome ,quality of life ,Reproduction ,QH471-489 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Published
- 2024
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15. Australian general practitioners’ perspectives on integrating specialist diabetes care with primary care: qualitative study
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Rachael Taylor, Shamasunder Acharya, Martha Parsons, Ushank Ranasinghe, Kerry Fleming, Melissa L. Harris, Deniz Kuzulugil, Julie Byles, Annalise Philcox, Meredith Tavener, John Attia, Johanna Kuehn, and Alexis Hure
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Diabetes ,Qualitative analysis ,Primary care ,General practitioners ,Service integration ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Improving the coordination and integration of health services is recognised nationally and internationally as a key strategy for improving the quality of diabetes care. The Australian Diabetes Alliance Program (DAP) is an integrated care model implemented in the Hunter New England Local Health District (HNELHD), New South Wales (NSW), in which endocrinologists and diabetes educators collaborate with primary care teams via case-conferencing, practice performance review, and education sessions. The objective of this study was to report on general practitioners’ (GPs) perspectives on DAP and whether the program impacts on their skills, knowledge, and approach in delivering care to adult patients with type 2 diabetes. Methods Four primary care practices with high rates of monitoring haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels (> 90% of patients annually) and five practices with low rates of monitoring HbA1c levels (
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- 2023
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16. Effect of integrating traditional care with modern healthcare to improve tuberculosis control programs in Ethiopia: a protocol for a cluster-randomized controlled trial
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Desalegne Amare, Fentie Ambaw, and Kefyalew Addis Alene
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Tuberculosis ,Traditional health care ,Service integration ,Cluster-randomized controlled trial ,Ethiopia ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the world, despite being a preventable and curable disease. The World Health Organization (WHO) End-TB Strategy, aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), sets a target of reducing the TB mortality rate by 95%, TB incidence rate by 90%, and catastrophic costs due to TB by 2035, compared with a 2015 level. To achieve these ambitious targets, several interventions have been implemented in the last few years, resulting in major progress toward reducing the burden of TB. However, over one-third of the global TB cases remained undetected and never received treatment. Most of those undetected cases were found in low- and middle-income countries such as Ethiopia. Though several interventions were implemented to increase TB case detection and mitigate catastrophic costs associated with TB, sustaining these interventions in resource-constrained settings remains challenging. Consequently, an alternative method is needed to increase TB case detection while decreasing diagnosis delays and catastrophic costs. Therefore, this study aimed to integrate traditional TB care into modern TB care to improve TB control programs, including early TB case detection, and reduce catastrophic costs in high TB burden settings such as Ethiopia. Methods A cluster randomized controlled trial will be conducted in northwest Ethiopia to determine the effectiveness of integrating traditional care with modern TB care. The intervention will be conducted in randomly selected districts in the South Gondar Zone. The control group will be an equal number of districts with usual care. The intervention comprised three key components, which include referral linkage from traditional to modern health care; training of health professionals and traditional care providers in three different rounds to increase their knowledge, attitude, and skills toward the referral systems; and TB screening at traditional health care sites. The primary outcomes of interest will be an increase in case detection rate, and the secondary outcomes of interest will be decreased diagnosis delays and catastrophic costs for TB patients. Data will be collected in both the intervention and control groups on the main outcome of interest and a wide range of independent variables. Generalized linear mixed models will be used to compare the outcome of interest between the trial arms, with adjustment for baseline differences. Discussion This cluster-randomized controlled trial study will assess the effectiveness of a strategy that integrates traditional healthcare into the modern healthcare system for the control and prevention of TB in northwest Ethiopia, where nearly 90% of the population seeks care from traditional care systems. This trial will provide information on the effectiveness of traditional and modern healthcare integration to improve TB case detection, early diagnosis, and treatment, as well as reduce the catastrophic costs of TB. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05236452. Registered on July 22, 2022.
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- 2023
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17. Australian general practitioners' perspectives on integrating specialist diabetes care with primary care: qualitative study.
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Taylor, Rachael, Acharya, Shamasunder, Parsons, Martha, Ranasinghe, Ushank, Fleming, Kerry, Harris, Melissa L., Kuzulugil, Deniz, Byles, Julie, Philcox, Annalise, Tavener, Meredith, Attia, John, Kuehn, Johanna, and Hure, Alexis
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GENERAL practitioners ,PRIMARY care ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,DIABETES ,MEDICAL care ,PEOPLE with diabetes - Abstract
Background: Improving the coordination and integration of health services is recognised nationally and internationally as a key strategy for improving the quality of diabetes care. The Australian Diabetes Alliance Program (DAP) is an integrated care model implemented in the Hunter New England Local Health District (HNELHD), New South Wales (NSW), in which endocrinologists and diabetes educators collaborate with primary care teams via case-conferencing, practice performance review, and education sessions. The objective of this study was to report on general practitioners' (GPs) perspectives on DAP and whether the program impacts on their skills, knowledge, and approach in delivering care to adult patients with type 2 diabetes. Methods: Four primary care practices with high rates of monitoring haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels (> 90% of patients annually) and five practices with low rates of monitoring HbA1c levels (< 80% of patients annually) from HNELHD, NSW provided the sampling frame. A total of nine GPs were interviewed. The transcripts from the interviews were reviewed and analysed to identify emergent patterns and themes. Results: Overall, GPs were supportive of DAP. They considered that DAP resulted in significant changes in their knowledge, skills, and approach and improved the quality of diabetes care. Taking a more holistic approach to care, including assessing patients with diabetes for co-morbidities and risk factors that may impact on their future health was also noted. DAP was noted to increase the confidence levels of GPs, which enabled active involvement in the provision of diabetes care rather than referring patients for tertiary specialist care. However, some indicated the program could be time consuming and greater flexibility was needed. Conclusions: GPs reported DAP to benefit their knowledge, skills and approach for managing diabetes. Future research will need to investigate how to improve the intensity and flexibility of the program based on the workload of GPs to ensure long-term acceptability of the program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Health facility-based interventions and the uptake of contraception among people living with HIV: A systematic review & meta-analysis.
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R., Revathy, Chaurasia, Himanshu, Shetty, Siddesh, and Joshi, Beena
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- 2023
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19. Medical marketing in healthcare institutions with public-private partnership mechanisms
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А.V. Ivaniuk
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public-private partnerships ,medical marketing ,business processes ,service integration ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
The aim – to reveal the essence of medical marketing in healthcare institutions (HCI) with principles of public-private partnership (PPP). The study used general scientific methods of analysis, synthesis, generalization, interpretation of scientific data, as well as systemic and structural-functional approaches. The article reveals the essence, principles and functions of medical marketing in HCI with the mechanisms of PPP. The substantiation of the main marketing tools is given – business processes and integration processes that contribute to effective marketing in HCI. It also identified the key points that form the structure of medical business processes. The process approach to business process management is disclosed, which allows getting benefits for HCI. The definition and significance of the medical processes integration in HCI on PPP principles is provided, which contributes to the coordination of marketing activities with the strategy development within each integrated complex of HCI and the possibility of obtaining a positive synergistic effect. Examples of internal and external integration are given. The system for managing the external integration process is shown. To stimulate the integration process, bundled payment method has been defined. Conclusions. The article provides justification for medical marketing in HCI with the principles of PPP, focused on business processes and the integration of medical services, which ensures economic, medical and social efficiency and optimal functioning of HCI in market conditions.
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- 2023
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20. An elaboration of obstacles and perspectives of medical tourism development taking the approach of integrated service provision (Case study: Isfahan Province, Iran)
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S. S. Hosseini, M. Taghvaei, and Z. V. Ataev
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medical tourism ,service integration ,destination competitiveness ,evaluation of barriers ,compilation of perspectives ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Aim. The intention of the present research has been to examine and evaluate the barriers and limitations to the development of medical tourism in Isfahan as one of Iran’s tourism destinations by taking the approach of service integration.Materials and Methods. This exploratory research was conducted using mixed qualitative and quantitative methodology. Data analysis by the qualitative method was done using MAXQDA-18 software, while by the quantitative method a combination of SWOT strategic planning technique and multi-criteria decision making was usedResults. Multiple weaknesses and challenges were classified by using a framework of indexes developed on different dimensions including: quality of medical services and facilities; access to medical and tourism information; infrastructures and regulations; communications and marketing; environmental factors; treatment procedures and passive defense and international barriers. Meanwhile, the role of each of these dimensions and sub-indexes in impeding medical tourism development in the region was evaluated by examining the association between the various dimensions contributing to medical tourism development in Isfahan.Conclusions. To remove the barriers identified, several strategies are proposed. including the provision of health-based integrated services (medical, treatment and wellness), development of shared products by the sectors involved in this domain, compilation of a comprehensive plan for health tourism development, preparation of a coherent and well-organized scientific plan given the policies of resilient economy, realistic and practical attention to the branding issues, the usage of up-to-date methods of modern marketing plan for the health companies and facilitators, removal of the legal barriers to the medical tourism development and compilation of new supportive, supervisory and advertising policies.
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- 2023
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21. Effect of integrating traditional care with modern healthcare to improve tuberculosis control programs in Ethiopia: a protocol for a cluster-randomized controlled trial.
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Amare, Desalegne, Ambaw, Fentie, and Alene, Kefyalew Addis
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Background: Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the world, despite being a preventable and curable disease. The World Health Organization (WHO) End-TB Strategy, aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), sets a target of reducing the TB mortality rate by 95%, TB incidence rate by 90%, and catastrophic costs due to TB by 2035, compared with a 2015 level. To achieve these ambitious targets, several interventions have been implemented in the last few years, resulting in major progress toward reducing the burden of TB. However, over one-third of the global TB cases remained undetected and never received treatment. Most of those undetected cases were found in low- and middle-income countries such as Ethiopia. Though several interventions were implemented to increase TB case detection and mitigate catastrophic costs associated with TB, sustaining these interventions in resource-constrained settings remains challenging. Consequently, an alternative method is needed to increase TB case detection while decreasing diagnosis delays and catastrophic costs. Therefore, this study aimed to integrate traditional TB care into modern TB care to improve TB control programs, including early TB case detection, and reduce catastrophic costs in high TB burden settings such as Ethiopia. Methods: A cluster randomized controlled trial will be conducted in northwest Ethiopia to determine the effectiveness of integrating traditional care with modern TB care. The intervention will be conducted in randomly selected districts in the South Gondar Zone. The control group will be an equal number of districts with usual care. The intervention comprised three key components, which include referral linkage from traditional to modern health care; training of health professionals and traditional care providers in three different rounds to increase their knowledge, attitude, and skills toward the referral systems; and TB screening at traditional health care sites. The primary outcomes of interest will be an increase in case detection rate, and the secondary outcomes of interest will be decreased diagnosis delays and catastrophic costs for TB patients. Data will be collected in both the intervention and control groups on the main outcome of interest and a wide range of independent variables. Generalized linear mixed models will be used to compare the outcome of interest between the trial arms, with adjustment for baseline differences. Discussion: This cluster-randomized controlled trial study will assess the effectiveness of a strategy that integrates traditional healthcare into the modern healthcare system for the control and prevention of TB in northwest Ethiopia, where nearly 90% of the population seeks care from traditional care systems. This trial will provide information on the effectiveness of traditional and modern healthcare integration to improve TB case detection, early diagnosis, and treatment, as well as reduce the catastrophic costs of TB. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05236452. Registered on July 22, 2022. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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22. Perspectives on Coordinating Health Services for Individuals with Serious Mental Illness – A Qualitative Study
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Skjærpe JN, Joa I, Willumsen E, Hegelstad WTV, Iakovleva TA, and Storm M
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care coordination ,service integration ,qualitative interviews ,chronic medical condition ,physical health ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Jorunn Nærland Skjærpe,1 Inge Joa,1,2 Elisabeth Willumsen,1 Wenche ten Velden Hegelstad,2,3 Tatiana Aleksandrovna Iakovleva,4 Marianne Storm1,5 1Department of Public Health, Faculty of Health Science, University of Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway; 2TIPS Centre for Clinical Research in Psychosis, Stavanger University Hospital, Stavanger, Norway; 3Department of Social Studies, Faculty of Social Science, University of Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway; 4Stavanger Business School, University of Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway; 5Faculty of Health Sciences and Social Care, Molde University College, Molde, NorwayCorrespondence: Jorunn Nærland Skjærpe, University of Stavanger, Postbox 8600 FORUS, Stavanger, NO-4036, Norway, Tel +4797767039, Email jorunn.n.skjerpe@uis.noPurpose: Individuals with serious mental illness (SMI) might require coordinated health services to meet their healthcare needs. The overall aim of this study was to describe the perspectives of professionals (registered nurses, medical doctors, social educators, and social workers) on care coordination and measures to ensure proper and coordinated follow-up of the healthcare needs of individuals with SMI. More specifically, we investigated which measures are taken by employees in municipal health and care services to prevent the deterioration of health conditions and which measures are taken in cases where deterioration occurs despite preventive efforts.Method: The study comprised individual qualitative interviews with professionals employed in municipal health and care services in two Norwegian municipalities. The interview material was analyzed using systematic text condensation.Results: Three categories and seven subcategories were created in the data analysis: 1) Maintain a stable and meaningful home life, including ensuring proper housing and access to services and assistance in receiving healthcare; 2) Measures to prevent deterioration of the health condition, including close monitoring of symptoms, emergency psychiatric care plans and emergency room calls and visits; and 3) Inpatient care to stabilize acute and severe symptoms, including municipal inpatient care, returning home after inpatient care and a need for shared responsibility for treatment and care.Conclusion: Professionals employed in municipal health and care services coordinate health services to ensure proper and coordinated follow-up of the healthcare needs of individuals with SMI by ensuring housing services and access to the required healthcare. Measures taken when deterioration occurs include monitoring symptoms, use of emergency psychiatric care plans, emergency room contacts, or inpatient care.Keywords: care coordination, service integration, qualitative interviews, chronic medical condition, physical health
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- 2022
23. Blockchain aplicada en la innovación de proceso para la integración de servicios de tecnología financiera.
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Torres, John Alexander Arias, Alberto García-Arango, David, Echeverri Gutiérrez, Camilo Andrés, Acosta Agudelo, Leidy Catalina, and Echeverri Gutiérrez, Mauricio Stiven
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DIVERSIFICATION in industry ,FINANCIAL management ,FINANCIAL technology ,ELECTRONIC books ,FINANCIAL security ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Virtual Universidad Católica del Norte is the property of Revista Virtual Universidad Catolica del Norte and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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24. Experiences, Enablers, and Challenges in Service Delivery and Integration of COVID-19 Vaccines: A Rapid Systematic Review.
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Nabia, Sarah, Wonodi, Chizoba Barbara, Vilajeliu, Alba, Sussman, Sabine, Olson, Katharine, Cooke, Rianna, Udayakumar, Krishna, Twose, Claire, Ezeanya, Nwamaka, Adefarrell, Adewumi Adetola, and Lindstrand, Ann
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COVID-19 vaccines ,VACCINE hesitancy ,WOMEN'S programs ,HEALTH programs ,PREGNANT women ,NEEDLE exchange programs - Abstract
The COVID-19 vaccination is a crucial public health intervention for controlling the spread and severity of the SARS-CoV2 virus. COVID-19 vaccines have been developed in record time, but their deployment has varied across countries, owing to differences in health system capacity, demand for the vaccine, and purchasing power of countries. The aim of this rapid review is to summarize and synthesize experiences on COVID-19 vaccine service delivery and integration to inform future COVID-19 vaccination programming and contribute to the knowledge base for future pandemic management. A systematic search was conducted in PubMed, Scopus, and Global Index Medicus databases. Twenty-five studies were included in the analysis. Included studies spanned nine countries where COVID-19 vaccines were delivered through mass, mobile, and fixed-post vaccination service delivery models. There was limited evidence of integrating COVID-19 vaccines into routine services for pregnant women, people who inject drugs, and leveraging existing health programs to deliver COVID-19 vaccines to the general population. Common challenges reported were vaccine skepticism, lack of adequate health workers, and linguistic barriers to access. Partnerships with a variety of stakeholders and the involvement of volunteers were vital in overcoming barriers and contributed to the efficient functioning of COVID-19 vaccination programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. Supporting service integration through early childhood education: challenges and opportunities in regional contexts
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Cathrine Neilsen-Hewett, Marc de Rosnay, Janine Singleton, and Kim Stouse-Lee
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service integration ,early childhood education ,early childhood intervention ,regional communities ,developmental vulnerability ,early childhood pedagogy ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
IntroductionChildren and families residing in regional Australia experience higher rates of vulnerabilities coupled with inadequate access to the early childhood health and early intervention services which pose increased risk to their health, development and wellbeing. The current study was designed to respond to the inherent complexity of supporting effective integrated service provision in regional communities, with a view to develop a model of effective service integration that leverages the capacity and opportunity of universal early childhood education (ECE) provision.MethodThe study adopted a qualitative multiple case study design to explore the perceptions of ECE professionals across six regional ECE services and two early intervention professionals operating from a regional early childhood intervention (ECI) organization. Data included an initial audit of the service system landscape coupled with facilitated discussions (focus groups and interviews) to identify facilitators and challenges to service integration and current patterns of service usage and engagement.ResultsFindings highlighted the foundational importance of relationships for establishing trust, engagement and service sustainability, as well as the need for embedding structural supports, including the professionalization of educators, the utilization of a key worker model, and staff retention. Systemic constraints, including limitations and inconsistencies in community infrastructure, program atrophy, and the complexity of referral systems, were seen to undermine effective service integration.DiscussionFindings speak to the potentiality of the ECE context as a hub for effective service integration within a functional practice framework for ECE. We conclude by offering a suggested model to ensure service connections, and enhance professional capacity and sustainability.
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- 2023
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26. Higher rates of mental health screening of adolescents recorded after provider training using simulated patients in a Kenyan HIV clinic: results of a pilot study
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Tessa Concepcion, Peter Mogere, Kenneth Ngure, Njoroge Mwathi, Roy Njiru, Boaz Kipkorir, Catherine Kiptinness, Gakuo Maina, Emmah Owidi, Tamara Owens, Pamela Kohler, Bradley H. Wagenaar, Shannon Dorsey, Pamela Y. Collins, and Jennifer Velloza
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HIV ,global mental health ,simulated patient encounters ,service integration ,implementation strategies ,Kenya ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundKenyan adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) experience a dual burden of HIV and common mental disorders (CMD). HIV clinics are a key entry point for AGYW in need of integrated CMD and HIV care; however, rates of screening and referral for CMDs are low. Our objective was to test an evidence-based provider training strategy, simulated patient encounters (SPEs), on CMD service delivery for AGYW in a Kenyan HIV clinic.MethodsThis pilot study was conducted in a public HIV clinic in Thika, Kenya from January to November 2021. The simulated patient encounter (SPE) implementation strategy included case script development from prior qualitative work, patient actor training, and a three-day SPE training including four standardized mock clinical encounters followed by quantitative surveys assessing provider competencies for each encounter. We abstracted medical record data related to HIV and CMDs such as HIV status, reason for visit, CMD screening test performed, and counselling or referral information. We conducted an interrupted time series analysis using abstracted HIV and CMD screening rates from AGYW ages 16–25 years visiting the clinic 7 months before and 3 months after SPE training. We used generalized linear models to assess changes in CMD screening rates after training.ResultsA total of 10 providers participated in the training. Competency ratings improved across four mock encounters (mean score from 8.1 to 13.7) between first and fourth encounters. We abstracted all medical records (n = 1,154) including from 888 (76%) AGYW seeking HIV treatment, 243 (21%) seeking prevention services, and 34 (3%) seeking other services. CMD screening rates increased immediately following training from 8 to 21% [relative risk (RR) = 2.57, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.34–4.90, p
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- 2023
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27. Using Social Media to Enhance Provider Network for HIV and Harm Reduction Service Integration in Vietnam
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Li, Li, Lin, Chunqing, Feng, Nan, Le, Tuan Anh, Hsieh, Julie, Nguyen, Diep Bich, and Nguyen, Tuan Anh
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Substance Misuse ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Infectious Diseases ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Delivery of Health Care ,Integrated ,HIV Infections ,Harm Reduction ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Methadone ,Opiate Substitution Treatment ,Social Media ,Substance Abuse Treatment Centers ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Vietnam ,Social media ,Treatment providers ,Service integration ,Network ,Medios sociales ,Proveedores de tratamiento ,Integracion del servicio ,La red ,Public Health and Health Services ,Social Work ,Public Health ,Public health - Abstract
Social media can potentially serve as a platform to coordinate medical care among fragmented health sectors. This paper describes procedures of using social media to enhance antiretroviral therapy (ART) and methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) providers' virtual network for integrated service for HIV-positive people who inject drugs (PWID) in Vietnam. A total of 88 ART and MMT treatment providers participated in person group sessions followed by online virtual support to improve service integration. In-person reunions were held to reinforce Facebook participation and network activities. Content analysis was used to identify keywords and topic categories of the online information exchange. Both MMT and ART providers were actively engaged in online communications. Referral and treatment adherence were the two most frequently discussed topic areas by both the MMT and ART providers. Frequent cross-agency connections were observed. Online provider networks and communities could be built and useful to support treatment providers to improve service integration.
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- 2019
28. Integration of sexually transmitted infection and HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis services in sub-Saharan Africa: a scoping review
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Priyanka Anand, Linxuan Wu, and Kenneth Mugwanya
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STIs—sexually transmitted infections ,PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) ,sub sahara Africa ,service integration ,HIV prevention ,STI prevention ,Reproduction ,QH471-489 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
BackgroundPersons living in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) face disproportionate risk from overlapping epidemics of HIV and bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for prevention is gradually being scaled up globally including in several settings in SSA, which represents a key opportunity to integrate STI services with HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). However, there is limited literature on how to successfully integrate these services, particularly in the SSA context. Prior studies and reviews on STI and PrEP services have largely focused on high income countries.MethodsWe conducted a scoping review of prior studies of integration of STI and PrEP services in SSA. We searched PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane, and CINAHL, in addition to grey literature to identify studies that were published between January 2012 and December 2022, and which provided STI and PrEP services in SSA, with or without outcomes reported. Citations and abstracts were reviewed by two reviewers for inclusion. Full texts were then retrieved and reviewed in full by two reviewers.ResultsOur search strategy yielded 1951 records, of which 250 were retrieved in full. Our final review included 61 reports of 45 studies. Most studies were conducted in Southern (49.2%) and Eastern (24.6%) Africa. Service settings included public health clinics (26.2%), study clinics (23.0%), sexual and reproductive care settings (23.0%), maternal and child health settings (8.2%), community based services (11.5%), and mobile clinics (3.3%). A minority (11.4%) of the studies described only syndromic STI management while most (88.6%) included some form of etiological laboratory STI diagnosis. STI testing frequency ranged from baseline testing only to monthly screening. Types of STI tested for was also variable. Few studies reported outcomes related to implementation of STI services. There were high rates of curable STIs detected by laboratory testing (baseline genitourinary STI rates ranged from 5.6–30.8% for CT, 0.0–11.2% for GC, and 0.4–8.0% for TV).DiscussionExisting studies have implemented a varied range of STI services along with PrEP. This range reflects the lack of specific guidance regarding STI services within PrEP programs. However, there was limited evidence regarding implementation strategies for integration of STI and PrEP services in real world settings.
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- 2023
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29. A systematic approach to connected services in the urban environment
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Péter Szilassy and Bence Jenőfi
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smart city ,public services ,service integration ,city as a service ,urban efficiency ,Political institutions and public administration (General) ,JF20-2112 ,Public law ,K3150 ,Law of Europe ,KJ-KKZ - Abstract
As the global trend of people moving into cities ensues, local governments are evermore pressured to keep improving their services while serving a rising number of customers. The quality of life perceived by city dwellers, however, is influenced by a composition of all services they use, regardless of its public or private nature. Alternatively, residents judge cities based on a comprehensive experience. As such, private and public entities are jointly motivated to improve on this to retain and grow their customer base. Providing these services under a unified platform, however, may result in consolidated cost of provision as well as higher revenue potential via cross-upselling offers on personalised terms. Further on, it may enable cities to link discounted access to generally demanded or popular services to the utilisation or preference of services with positive externalities to the public, in line with the city’s strategy. In this article, the economic benefits of such a tight, so called ‘City as a Service’ level of integration will be looked at.
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- 2022
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30. ANALYTICAL MODEL OF SERVICE OF INTEGRATION OF PROGRAM COMPONENTS OPERATIONS SUPPORT SYSTEM AND BUSINESS OF THE TELECOM OPERATOR OF OSS|BSS
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Dmitrij Valerevich Mochalov
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система интеграции ,программные компоненты ,модель интеграции ,сервис инте-грации ,система oss ,bss ,преобразование лапласа-стилтьеса ,system integration ,software components ,the model integration ,service integration ,system oss ,conversion laplace-steltjes ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 - Abstract
Formalized the task of developing the service integration of software components of a distributed system OSS|BSS communications operator model of integration is presented in the form of a multiphase queuing system, the dependences of the busy period of system, waiting time and residence requirements of the system on its boot.
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- 2022
31. Integration of a menstrual health intervention in a community-based sexual and reproductive health service for young people in Zimbabwe: a qualitative acceptability study
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Mandikudza Tembo, Jenny Renju, Helen A. Weiss, Ethel Dauya, Nancy Gweshe, Precious Ndlovu, Portia Nzombe, Chido Dziva Chikwari, Constancia Vimbayi Mavodza, Constance R. S. Mackworth-Young, Rashida A. Ferrand, and Suzanna C. Francis
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Menstrual health ,Acceptability ,Community-based interventions ,Youth ,Service delivery ,Service integration ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Despite being fundamental to the health and well-being of women, menstrual health is often overlooked as a health priority and access to menstrual health education, products, and support is limited. Consequently, many young women are unprepared for menarche and face challenges in accessing menstrual health products and support and in managing menstruation in a healthy and dignified way. In this paper, we examine the acceptability of a comprehensive menstrual health and hygiene (MHH) intervention integrated within a community-based sexual and reproductive health (SRH) service for young people aged 16–24 years in Zimbabwe called CHIEDZA. Methods We conducted focus group discussions, that included participatory drawings, with CHIEDZA healthcare service providers (N = 3) and with young women who had attended CHIEDZA (N = 6) between June to August 2020. Translated transcripts were read for familiarisation and thematic analysis was used to explore acceptability. We applied Sekhon’s thematic framework of acceptability that looks at seven key constructs (affective attitudes, burden, ethicality, intervention coherence, opportunity costs, perceived effectiveness, and self-efficacy). Data from FGDs and meeting minutes taken during the study time period were used to triangulate a comprehensive understanding of MHH intervention acceptability. Results The MHH intervention was acceptable to participants as it addressed the severe prevailing lack of access to menstrual health education, products, and support in the communities, and facilitated access to other SRH services on site. In addition to the constructs defined by Sekhon’s thematic framework, acceptability was also informed by external contextual factors such as sociocultural norms and the economic environment. Providers highlighted the increased burden in their workload due to demand for MHH products, and how sociocultural beliefs around insertable menstrual products compromising virginity can negatively affect acceptability among young people and community members. Conclusions MHH interventions are acceptable to young women in community-based settings in Zimbabwe as there is great unmet need for comprehensive MHH support. The integration of MHH in SRH services can serve as a facilitator to female engagement with SRH services. However, it is important to note that contextual external factors can affect the implementation and acceptability of integrated SRH and MHH services within communities. Trial registration Registry: Clinicaltrials.gov, Registration Number: NCT03719521 , Registration Date: October 25, 2018.
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- 2022
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32. A scoping review examining the integration of exercise services in clinical oncology settings
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Elochukwu F. Ezenwankwo, Daniel A. Nnate, Godspower D. Usoro, Chimdimma P. Onyeso, Ijeoma B. Anieto, Sam C. Ibeneme, Yumna Albertus, Victoria E Lambert, Antoninus O. Ezeukwu, Ukachukwu O. Abaraogu, and Delva Shamley
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Exercise-based rehabilitation ,Service integration ,Reach ,Adoption ,Cost ,Utilization ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Addressing questions surrounding the feasibility of embedding exercise service units in clinical oncology settings is imperative for developing a sustainable exercise-oncology clinical pathway. We examined available literature and offered practical recommendations to support evidence-based practice, policymaking, and further investigations. Methods Four thousand eight hundred sixty-three unique records identified in Embase, CINAHL, MEDLINE, Web of Science Core Collection, and ProQuest (Health and Medicine) were screened for studies that recruited cancer patients, assessed the co-location of exercise service and cancer treatment units, and reported findings on service implementation. Evidence from six studies providing data from over 30 programs was integrated using narrative synthesis. Results Service implementation was relatively modest across the included studies. Exercise services were delivered by physiotherapists, exercise physiologists, and kinesiologists and funded mainly through grants and private donations, with staff salaries accruing as the major expense. Service penetration, adoption, and acceptability were generally low. However, studies recorded high clinician/patient satisfaction. Major barriers to service integration were limited funding, lack of detailed implementation plan, and low organizational buy-in. Common reasons for non-utilization, missed sessions, and dropouts were lack of interest, unwellness, hospital readmission, disease progression, and adverse skeletal events. Conclusion Implementing exercise services in clinical oncology settings seems an effective approach for increasing access to exercise-based rehabilitation for individuals on cancer treatment. While this model appears feasible for patients/clinicians, efforts are required to optimize service integration both in the short and long term. Key priorities include seeking [local] actions to address issues relating to funding and organizational buy-in. Important considerations may include developing an implementation plan to guide the implementation process, expanding the patient core management team to include staff from the exercise rehabilitation unit, and exploring the role of patient feedback in increasing clinician participation (e.g., treating oncologists and nurses) in the referral process. Future research should consider effective strategies to promote patients’ sense of self-efficacy and behavioral control and, further, the place of audit and feedback in improving exercise service delivery and overall service implementation.
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- 2022
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33. Intersecting substance use treatment and harm reduction services: exploring the characteristics and service needs of a community-based sample of people who use drugs.
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Krawczyk, Noa, Allen, Sean T., Schneider, Kristin E., Solomon, Keisha, Shah, Hridika, Morris, Miles, Harris, Samantha J., Sherman, Susan G., and Saloner, Brendan
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HARM reduction , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *OPIOID abuse , *CONVENIENCE sampling (Statistics) , *NEEDLE exchange programs , *DRUG overdose - Abstract
Background: Substance use treatment and harm reduction services are essential components of comprehensive strategies for reducing the harms of drug use and overdose. However, these services have been historically siloed, and there is a need to better understand how programs that serve people who use drugs (PWUD) are integrating these services. In this study, we compared treatment and harm reduction services offered by a multistate sample of substance use service providers and assessed how well they align with characteristics and needs of clients they serve early in the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: We recruited a convenience sample of programs that deliver harm reduction and/or treatment services in ten US states. Program directors participated in a survey assessing the services offered at their program. We also recruited clients of these programs to participate in a survey assessing a range of sociodemographic and health characteristics, substance use behaviors, and health service utilization. We then cross-compared client characteristics and behaviors relative to services being offered through these programs. Results: We collected and analyzed data from 511 clients attending 18 programs that we classified as either offering treatment with medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) (N = 6), syringe service programs (SSP) (N = 8), or offering both MOUD and SSP (N = 4). All programs delivered a range of treatment and harm reduction services, with MOUD & SSP programs delivering the greatest breadth of services. There were discrepancies between services provided and characteristics and behaviors reported by clients: 80% of clients of programs that offered MOUD without SSP actively used drugs and 50% injected drugs; 40% of clients of programs that offered SSP without MOUD sought drug treatment services. Approximately half of clients were unemployed and unstably housed, but few programs offered direct social services. Conclusions: In many ways, existing programs are not meeting the service needs of PWUD. Investing in innovative models that empower clients and integrate a range of accessible and flexible treatment, harm reduction and social services can pave the way for a more effective and equitable service system that considers the long-term health of PWUD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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34. Designing the Tourist Journey for the Advancement of Sustainable Tourist Practices.
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Fragidis, Garyfallos, Riskos, Kyriakos, and Kotzaivazoglou, Iordanis
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Sustainable tourism has become a key priority in the strategic plans for tourism development in order to attain sociocultural development and environmental preservation. This paper examines opportunities for the advancement of sustainable tourism by encouraging tourists to consider sustainability and to include sustainable options in their tourist practices. The paper adopts a practice-based approach for the understanding of tourist behavior as a series of practices tourists perform for the development of valuable experiences, usually with the support of services offered by tourist organizations and service providers. Sustainability is an option for tourists that needs to be offered, promoted, and supported when they decide on their practices and the way they will perform them. Hence, sustainability is an option that needs to be designed so that tourists are enabled and motivated to adopt sustainable tourist practices. The paper proposes the sustainable tourist journey as an approach for the analysis and design of sustainable tourist practices that is based on the holistic scope of the consumer journey. The paper contributes to the advancement of sustainable tourism by introducing and improving the understanding of sustainability concerns in tourist practices. The paper discusses also how digital technologies can support the design of sustainable tourist practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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35. Experiences, Enablers, and Challenges in Service Delivery and Integration of COVID-19 Vaccines: A Rapid Systematic Review
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Sarah Nabia, Chizoba Barbara Wonodi, Alba Vilajeliu, Sabine Sussman, Katharine Olson, Rianna Cooke, Krishna Udayakumar, Claire Twose, Nwamaka Ezeanya, Adewumi Adetola Adefarrell, and Ann Lindstrand
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COVID-19 vaccines ,service delivery ,service integration ,vaccination strategies ,Medicine - Abstract
The COVID-19 vaccination is a crucial public health intervention for controlling the spread and severity of the SARS-CoV2 virus. COVID-19 vaccines have been developed in record time, but their deployment has varied across countries, owing to differences in health system capacity, demand for the vaccine, and purchasing power of countries. The aim of this rapid review is to summarize and synthesize experiences on COVID-19 vaccine service delivery and integration to inform future COVID-19 vaccination programming and contribute to the knowledge base for future pandemic management. A systematic search was conducted in PubMed, Scopus, and Global Index Medicus databases. Twenty-five studies were included in the analysis. Included studies spanned nine countries where COVID-19 vaccines were delivered through mass, mobile, and fixed-post vaccination service delivery models. There was limited evidence of integrating COVID-19 vaccines into routine services for pregnant women, people who inject drugs, and leveraging existing health programs to deliver COVID-19 vaccines to the general population. Common challenges reported were vaccine skepticism, lack of adequate health workers, and linguistic barriers to access. Partnerships with a variety of stakeholders and the involvement of volunteers were vital in overcoming barriers and contributed to the efficient functioning of COVID-19 vaccination programs.
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- 2023
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36. Innovación en materia de inclusión social: atención integrada entre servicios sociales y de empleo. El caso del proyecto ERSISI en Navarra.
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Martínez Sordoni, Laureano
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SOCIAL problems ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL policy ,SOCIAL justice ,EMPLOYMENT agencies ,SOCIAL innovation ,SOCIAL integration - Abstract
Copyright of Cuadernos de Trabajo Social is the property of Universidad Complutense de Madrid and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2022
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37. Exploring the feasibility and acceptability of integrating screening for gender-based violence into HIV counselling and testing for adolescent girls and young women in Tanzania and South Africa
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Manuela Colombini, Fiona Scorgie, Anne Stangl, Sheila Harvey, Lethabo Ramskin, Nomhle Khoza, Emma Mashauri, Deborah Baron, Shelley Lees, Saidi Kapiga, Charlotte Watts, Sinead Delany-Moretlwe, and on behalf of the EMPOWER study team
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Gender-based violence ,Screening ,PrEP ,HIV prevention ,Adolescent girls and young women ,Service integration ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Gender-based violence (GBV) undermines HIV prevention and treatment cascades, particularly among women who report partner violence. Screening for violence during HIV testing, and prior to offering pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to HIV uninfected women, provides an opportunity to identify those at heightened HIV risk and greater potential for non-adherence or early discontinuation of PrEP. The paper describes our experience with offering integrated GBV screening and referral as part of HIV counselling and testing. This component was implemented within EMPOWER, a demonstration project offering combination HIV prevention, including daily oral PrEP, to young women in South Africa and Tanzania. Methods Between February 2017 and March 2018, a process evaluation was conducted to explore views, experiences and practices of stakeholders (study participants and study clinical staff) during implementation of the GBV screening component. This article assesses the feasibility and acceptability of the approach from multiple stakeholder perspectives, drawing on counselling session observations (n = 10), in-depth interviews with participants aged 16–24 (n = 39) and clinical staff (n = 13), and notes from debriefings with counsellors. Study process data were also collected (e.g. number of women screened and referred). Following a thematic inductive approach, qualitative data were analysed using qualitative software (NVivo 11). Results Findings show that 31% of young women screened positive for GBV and only 10% requested referrals. Overall, study participants accessing PrEP were amenable to being asked about violence during HIV risk assessment, as this offered the opportunity to find emotional relief and seek help, although a few found this traumatic. In both sites, the sensitive and empathetic approach of the staff helped mitigate distress of GBV disclosure. In general, the delivery of GBV screening in HCT proved to be feasible, provided that the basic principles of confidentiality, staff empathy, and absence of judgment were observed. However, uptake of linkage to further care remained low in both sites. Conclusion Most stakeholders found GBV screening acceptable and feasible. Key principles that should be in place for young women to be asked safely about GBV during HIV counselling and testing included respect for confidentiality, a youth-friendly and non-judgmental environment, and a functioning referral network.
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- 2021
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38. Computer-based alcohol reduction intervention for alcohol-using HIV/HCV co-infected Russian women in clinical care: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
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Ralph J. DiClemente, Jennifer L. Brown, Ariadna Capasso, Natalia Revzina, Jessica M. Sales, Ekaterina Boeva, Lyudmila V. Gutova, Nadia B. Khalezova, Nikolay Belyakov, and Vadim Rassokhin
- Subjects
HIV ,Hepatitis C virus ,HIV/HCV co-infection ,Russia ,Women ,Service integration ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Russia has a high prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections. In 2018, over one million persons were living with HIV (PLWH); over a third were women. A high proportion of HIV-infected women are co-infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), and many consume alcohol, which adversely affects HIV and HCV treatment and prognosis. Despite the triple epidemics of alcohol use, HIV and HCV, and the need for interventions to reduce alcohol use among HIV/HCV co-infected women, evidence-based alcohol reduction interventions for this vulnerable population are limited. To address this gap, we developed a clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of a computer-based intervention to reduce alcohol consumption among HIV/HCV co-infected women in clinical care. Methods In this two-arm parallel randomized controlled trial, we propose to evaluate the efficacy of a culturally adapted alcohol reduction intervention delivered via a computer for HIV/HCV co-infected Russian women. The study population consists of women 21–45 years old with confirmed HIV/HCV co-infection who currently use alcohol. Intervention efficacy is assessed by a novel alcohol biomarker, ethyl glucuronide (EtG), and biomarkers of HIV and HCV disease progression. Women are randomized to trial conditions in a 1:1 allocation ratio, using a computer-generated algorithm to develop the assignment sequence and concealment of allocation techniques to minimize assignment bias. Women are randomized to either (1) the computer-based alcohol reduction intervention or (2) the standard-of-care control condition. We will use an intent-to-treat analysis and logistic and linear generalized estimating equations to evaluate intervention efficacy, relative to the standard of care, in enhancing the proportion of women with a laboratory-confirmed negative EtG at each research study visit over the 9-month follow-up period. Additional analyses will evaluate intervention effects on HIV (viral load and CD4+ levels) and HCV markers of disease progression (FibroScan). Discussion The proposed trial design and analysis provides an appropriate conceptual and methodological framework to assess the efficacy of the computer-based intervention. We propose to recruit 200 participants. The intervention, if efficacious, may be an efficient and cost-effective alcohol reduction strategy that is scalable and can be readily disseminated and integrated into clinical care in Russia to reduce women’s alcohol consumption and enhance HIV/HCV prognosis. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03362476 . Registered on 5 December 2017
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- 2021
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39. Croatian Models and Experience in First-Episode Psychosis Treatment
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A. Savic, D. Ostojic, and P. Brecic
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early intervention ,First-episode psychosis ,service integration ,schizophrénia ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
We have witnessed a significant push towards staging in medicine. That trend has not bypassed psychiatry, with realization that early phases of various disorders present the window for early intervention that is most likely to result in preserving every-day functionality and achieving favourable outcomes. First-episode psychosis programs have been developed in order to ensure adequate early interaction with psychiatric services, help achieve faster and quality remission, prevent relapses and ensure better long-term outcomes. There is still, however, no consensus on the format or the most appropriate intervention in the early-course psychosis. Patients in Zagreb, Croatia, are offered a number of first-episode psychosis programs, one of which is housed in the largest Croatian psychiatric institution, University Psychiatric Hospital Vrapce. Specialized early-course treatment model in Vrapce stemmed from first-episode inpatient unit established in 2004, and grew to present in its core integration of care across different organizational units, acuity levels, and specific patient needs. Recognizing that a significant number of first-episode patients first interact with psychiatric services through emergency units, Vrapce’s model fostered early interaction with specialized services staff starting with intensive and emergency care units, allowing for continuity of care and early recruitment into specialized services. Vertical integration meant inpatient acute and subacute units seamlessly linked with day hospital and outpatient services, creating the setting for earlier formation of therapeutic alliance and treatment plans, but also allowing for flexible entry points for users. COVID-19 pandemic, in addition to challenging the initial integrations of services, facilitated transfer of certain services into virtual space.
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- 2022
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40. Client Acceptability for Integrating Antiretroviral Therapy in Methadone Maintenance Therapy Clinics in Sichuan, China
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Lin, Chunqing, Li, Li, and Cao, Xiaobin
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Health Services ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,China ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Heroin Dependence ,Humans ,Male ,Methadone ,Middle Aged ,Opiate Substitution Treatment ,Patient Satisfaction ,Treatment Outcome ,Acceptability ,antiretroviral therapy ,methadone maintenance therapy ,service integration ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Substance Abuse ,Public health ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundUsing methadone maintenance therapy (MMT) clinics to deliver antiretroviral therapy (ART) has proven to be effective for promoting treatment initiation and adherence in drug users living with HIV.ObjectivesThe objective of this study was to investigate the HIV-positive client acceptability of integrated ART services and to identify the reasons for and factors associated with service acceptability.MethodsA total of 86 HIV-positive MMT clients were recruited from 12 MMT clinics in Sichuan Province, China. They participated in a cross-sectional survey that queried their willingness to receive seven different types of MMT-based ART services. The reasons for their willingness/unwillingness to accept these services were documented. The association between service acceptability and background characteristics was examined.ResultsThe most accepted integrated services were ART-related counseling (75.6%) and referral (73.2%). Concerns regarding the provider's lack of ART expertise and confidentiality issues were common barriers for the acceptance of MMT-based ART services. A trust relationship with MMT providers was a reason for service acceptance. Service acceptability was associated with a poorer perceived health status. Conclusions/Importance: ART-related services, based on the client perspective, can be delivered at MMT clinics. However, service provider training and the protection of confidentiality must be strengthened for the effective implementation of integrated service delivery.
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- 2017
41. POTENCIALIDADES Y LIMITES DE LA INTEGRACIÓN DE SERVICIOS SOCIALES Y DE EMPLEO: LA VALORACIÓN DE LOS ACTORES IMPLICADOS.
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MARTINEZ SORDONI, LAUREANO, PÉREZ ERANSUS, BEGOÑA, and SÁNCHEZ SALMERÓN, VÍCTOR
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- *
SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL problems , *SOCIAL justice , *LABOR market , *EMPLOYMENT agencies , *SOCIAL innovation - Abstract
The integrated delivery of social and employment services has become one of the main social innovation reforms in European policies. Its aim is to overcome the obstacles posed by the fragmentation of welfare systems. This article aims to contribute to knowledge in this field based on the analysis of a pilot experience carried out in Navarra between 2016 and 2019, in the areas of Tudela and Sakana specifically. To this end, the article presents the results of the evaluation of the integrated service delivery model based on the assessments made by the stakeholders involved, including the beneficiaries. The results show that progress has been made in innovative aspects of service integration, both at the organisational level and in terms of access to activation resources for participants. However, the design of active inclusion policies for groups with complex problems needs to be improved in order to achieve better results in terms of labour market integration. This evidence is intended to underpin the transfer of the model to the entire territory of the community, planned for 2022. Given the type of social problems they address, the need to give continuity over time to this type of reforms and to evaluate them in the long term is pointed out. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
42. Integration of a menstrual health intervention in a community-based sexual and reproductive health service for young people in Zimbabwe: a qualitative acceptability study.
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Tembo, Mandikudza, Renju, Jenny, Weiss, Helen A., Dauya, Ethel, Gweshe, Nancy, Ndlovu, Precious, Nzombe, Portia, Chikwari, Chido Dziva, Mavodza, Constancia Vimbayi, Mackworth-Young, Constance R. S., A. Ferrand, Rashida, and Francis, Suzanna C.
- Abstract
Background: Despite being fundamental to the health and well-being of women, menstrual health is often overlooked as a health priority and access to menstrual health education, products, and support is limited. Consequently, many young women are unprepared for menarche and face challenges in accessing menstrual health products and support and in managing menstruation in a healthy and dignified way. In this paper, we examine the acceptability of a comprehensive menstrual health and hygiene (MHH) intervention integrated within a community-based sexual and reproductive health (SRH) service for young people aged 16-24 years in Zimbabwe called CHIEDZA.Methods: We conducted focus group discussions, that included participatory drawings, with CHIEDZA healthcare service providers (N = 3) and with young women who had attended CHIEDZA (N = 6) between June to August 2020. Translated transcripts were read for familiarisation and thematic analysis was used to explore acceptability. We applied Sekhon's thematic framework of acceptability that looks at seven key constructs (affective attitudes, burden, ethicality, intervention coherence, opportunity costs, perceived effectiveness, and self-efficacy). Data from FGDs and meeting minutes taken during the study time period were used to triangulate a comprehensive understanding of MHH intervention acceptability.Results: The MHH intervention was acceptable to participants as it addressed the severe prevailing lack of access to menstrual health education, products, and support in the communities, and facilitated access to other SRH services on site. In addition to the constructs defined by Sekhon's thematic framework, acceptability was also informed by external contextual factors such as sociocultural norms and the economic environment. Providers highlighted the increased burden in their workload due to demand for MHH products, and how sociocultural beliefs around insertable menstrual products compromising virginity can negatively affect acceptability among young people and community members.Conclusions: MHH interventions are acceptable to young women in community-based settings in Zimbabwe as there is great unmet need for comprehensive MHH support. The integration of MHH in SRH services can serve as a facilitator to female engagement with SRH services. However, it is important to note that contextual external factors can affect the implementation and acceptability of integrated SRH and MHH services within communities.Trial Registration: Registry: Clinicaltrials.gov, Registration Number: NCT03719521 , Registration Date: October 25, 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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43. The interRAI Child and Youth Suite of Mental Health Assessment Instruments: An Integrated Approach to Mental Health Service Delivery.
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Stewart, Shannon L., Celebre, Angela, Semovski, Valbona, Hirdes, John P., Vadeboncoeur, Chris, and Poss, Jeffrey W.
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MENTAL health services ,YOUTH health ,MENTAL health ,YOUNG adults ,HEALTH information systems ,LIFE course approach - Abstract
Various biological, social, psychological, and environmental factors impact children and youth living with mental health problems across their lifespan. To meet the wide-ranging challenges of mental illness, service system integration is needed to improve efficiencies and reduce fragmentation. Unfortunately, the mental health system has been plagued by the lack of coordination across services. There is a general consensus that mental health service delivery must ensure a child or youth's needs are addressed in a collaborative, coordinated, and seamless manner. A key element to successful integration is the development of a comprehensive standardized screening and assessment system. Numerous assessments have been developed to assess child mental health and functioning, but they typically have a very narrow focus with limited use and utility. Not only does this reduce the ability to take a life course perspective to mental health, but this uncoordinated approach also results in redundancies in information collected, additional resources, and increased assessor burden for children, youth, and their families. The interRAI child and youth mental health assessment suite was developed in response to the need for an integrated mental health system for young persons. This suite includes screening and assessment instruments for in-patient and community settings, emergency departments, educational settings, and youth justice custodial facilities. The instruments form a mental health information system intentionally designed to work in an integrated fashion beginning in infancy, and incorporate key applications such as care planning, outcome measurement, resource allocation, and quality improvement. The design of these assessment tools and their psychometric properties are reviewed. Data is then presented using examples related to interpersonal trauma, illustrating the use and utility of the integrated suite, along with the various applications of these assessment systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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44. A scoping review examining the integration of exercise services in clinical oncology settings.
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Ezenwankwo, Elochukwu F., Nnate, Daniel A., Usoro, Godspower D., Onyeso, Chimdimma P., Anieto, Ijeoma B., Ibeneme, Sam C., Albertus, Yumna, Lambert, Victoria E, Ezeukwu, Antoninus O., Abaraogu, Ukachukwu O., and Shamley, Delva
- Abstract
Background: Addressing questions surrounding the feasibility of embedding exercise service units in clinical oncology settings is imperative for developing a sustainable exercise-oncology clinical pathway. We examined available literature and offered practical recommendations to support evidence-based practice, policymaking, and further investigations.Methods: Four thousand eight hundred sixty-three unique records identified in Embase, CINAHL, MEDLINE, Web of Science Core Collection, and ProQuest (Health and Medicine) were screened for studies that recruited cancer patients, assessed the co-location of exercise service and cancer treatment units, and reported findings on service implementation. Evidence from six studies providing data from over 30 programs was integrated using narrative synthesis.Results: Service implementation was relatively modest across the included studies. Exercise services were delivered by physiotherapists, exercise physiologists, and kinesiologists and funded mainly through grants and private donations, with staff salaries accruing as the major expense. Service penetration, adoption, and acceptability were generally low. However, studies recorded high clinician/patient satisfaction. Major barriers to service integration were limited funding, lack of detailed implementation plan, and low organizational buy-in. Common reasons for non-utilization, missed sessions, and dropouts were lack of interest, unwellness, hospital readmission, disease progression, and adverse skeletal events.Conclusion: Implementing exercise services in clinical oncology settings seems an effective approach for increasing access to exercise-based rehabilitation for individuals on cancer treatment. While this model appears feasible for patients/clinicians, efforts are required to optimize service integration both in the short and long term. Key priorities include seeking [local] actions to address issues relating to funding and organizational buy-in. Important considerations may include developing an implementation plan to guide the implementation process, expanding the patient core management team to include staff from the exercise rehabilitation unit, and exploring the role of patient feedback in increasing clinician participation (e.g., treating oncologists and nurses) in the referral process. Future research should consider effective strategies to promote patients' sense of self-efficacy and behavioral control and, further, the place of audit and feedback in improving exercise service delivery and overall service implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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45. Facades-as-a-Service: The Role of Technology in the Circular Servitisation of the Building Envelope.
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Azcarate-Aguerre, Juan F., Klein, Tillmann, Konstantinou, Thaleia, and Veerman, Martijn
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BUILDING envelopes ,ENGINEERING design ,BUILT environment ,MANUFACTURING processes - Abstract
Featured Application: The research proposes a strategic path to align future development in façade and façade-integrated technologies with the new economic, legal, and organizational requirements of a more sustainable, circular, and performance-based façade industry. The servitisation of the built environment, through the implementation of product–service systems, is considered a promising business strategy to achieve a circular economy transition. This servitisation faces a number of practical challenges, among them the technological readiness and effective integration and application of existing and emerging products, manufacturing processes, and digital monitoring and management tools. The research builds on targeted literature review, and on a research-through-design approach based on full-scale pilot projects developed in an ongoing feedback loop between researchers, planners, and industry partners representing both the demand and supply sides of the façade industry in the Netherlands. The paper analyses the technical implementation challenges currently preventing the façade industry from adopting performance-based contracts. It then proposes the roles that existing and emerging digital design and engineering technologies, manufacturing processes, and asset management systems can play in the development, implementation, and fulfilment of such contracts. The paper proposes a multi-stakeholder, systemic model for the development and application of façade technologies capable of overcoming many of the technical implementation barriers to the delivery of performance-based contracts for integrated facades. From this it concludes that an effective development of building technologies should strategically align with the solving of economic and contractual challenges such as circularity-readiness, profitability, risk distribution, legal demarcation, performance monitoring, and residual value stewardship. The resulting framework provides a strategic and conceptual basis for the development of circularity-enabling façade technologies, accounting for the diverse and sometimes conflicting interests of the multitude of stakeholders involved throughout a project's lifecycle. The framework aims to support planners, manufacturers, and builders accelerate the circular deep energy renovation of the built environment while also exploring new business opportunities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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46. Housing and Ageing: Let’s Get Serious—'How Do You Plan for the Future while Addressing Immediate Chaos?'
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Vikki McCall, Friederike Ziegler, Jane Robertson, Melanie Lovatt, Judith Phillips, Jeremy Porteus, Zhan McIntyre, Alasdair Rutherford, Judith Sixsmith, Ryan Woolrych, Jim Eadie, Jim Wallman, Melissa Epinosa, Emma Harrison, and Tom Wallace
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ageing policy ,community ,co-production ,equalities ,home ,housing policy ,housing practice ,serious game methodology ,service integration ,strategic planning ,Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Abstract
This article presents findings from the Housing and Ageing programme conducted in 2018 that investigated how the housing sector can effectively plan for an ageing population. The project took a transdisciplinary approach to focus on new, critical insights into the process of decision making concerning housing and ageing across Scotland, England and Wales. A ‘Serious Game’ methodology was developed that explored over 200 policy maker, practitioner and service user perspectives. This was used as a framework to capture priorities, decisions, negotiations and processes that indicate how a ‘sense of place’ and ‘place belonging’ can influence the development of suitable housing for older people. Key housing provision challenges identified were tackling inequality, preserving autonomy, in(ter)dependence, empowerment and accessibility. Such challenges need consideration when strategically planning for the future. The findings recommend placing housing at the heart of service integration to support the co-production of decisions that emphasise the importance of working together across boundaries within social policy, service and stakeholder groups. A place-based approach can support the perception that we are all stakeholders in ageing.
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- 2020
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47. Quality and Integrated Service Delivery: A Cross-Sectional Study of the Effects of Malaria and Antenatal Service Quality on Malaria Intervention Use in Sub-Saharan Africa
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Elizabeth H. Lee, James D. Mancuso, Tracey Koehlmoos, V. Ann Stewart, Jason W. Bennett, and Cara Olsen
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malaria ,pregnancy ,antenatal care ,service integration ,quality ,Sub-Saharan Africa ,Medicine - Abstract
Using regionally linked facility and household surveys, we measured the quality of integrated antenatal care and malaria in pregnancy services in Kenya, Namibia, Senegal, and Tanzania. We examined country heterogeneities for the association of integrated antenatal and malaria service quality scores with insecticide-treated bed net (ITN) use in pregnant women and children under-five and intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy (IPTp-2) uptake. Malaria in pregnancy service quality was low overall. Our findings suggest modest, positive associations between malaria in pregnancy quality and ITN use and IPTp-2 uptake across pooled models and for most studied countries, with evidence of heterogeneity in the strength of associations and relevant confounding factors. Antenatal care quality generally was not associated with the study outcomes, although a positive interaction with malaria in pregnancy quality was present for pooled ITN use models. The improved quality of malaria services delivered during formal antenatal care can help address low coverage and usage rates of preventive malaria interventions in pregnancy and childhood. Study findings may be used to target quality improvement efforts at the sub-national level. Study methods may be adapted to identify low-performing facilities for intervention and adaption to other areas of care, such as HIV/AIDS, child immunizations, and postnatal care.
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- 2022
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48. Integration of a contraception clinic into an opioid treatment setting to improve contraception knowledge, accessibility and uptake: a pilot study
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Carolyn A. Day, Bethany White, Sharon E. Reid, Molly Fowler, and Kirsten I. Black
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opioid agonist treatment ,service integration ,women ,long‐acting reversible contraception ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Objective: To assess the feasibility and acceptability of integrating a contraception clinic within an opioid agonist treatment (OAT) service to improve access to contraception, especially long‐acting reversible methods of contraception (LARC), for women receiving OAT, who have increased risk of unplanned pregnancies and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Methods: A contraception clinic was established at a Sydney OAT service. Forty‐eight female OAT clients were surveyed regarding their contraception knowledge and needs. Interested and eligible women were referred to the contraception clinic. Results: Women were aged a median of 39 years (range 24–54 years). Most women (83%) agreed it was acceptable for their OAT clinician to discuss contraception with them. Eight women reported current LARC use and 21 reported they would consider using LARC. Twenty‐three women were eligible for contraception (sexually active, aged
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- 2020
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49. Health 4.0: On the Way to Realizing the Healthcare of the Future
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Jameela Al-Jaroodi, Nader Mohamed, and Eman Abukhousa
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Health 40 ,Industry 40 ,healthcare systems ,service-oriented middleware ,service integration ,health cloud ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
Health 4.0 establishes a new promising vision for the healthcare industry. It creatively integrates and employ innovative technologies such as the Internet of Health Things (IoHT), medical Cyber-Physical Systems (medical CPS), health cloud, health fog, big data analytics, machine learning, blockchain, and smart algorithms. The goal is to deliver improved, value-added and cost-effective healthcare services to patients and enhance the effectiveness and efficiency or the healthcare industry. Health 4.0 (adapted from the Industry 4.0 principles) changes the healthcare business model to enhance the interactions across the healthcare clients (the patients), stakeholders, infrastructure, and value chain. This effectively will improve the quality, flexibility, productivity, cost-effectiveness, and reliability of healthcare services in addition to increasing patients' satisfaction. However, building and utilizing healthcare applications that follow the Health 4.0 concept is a non-trivial and complex endeavor. In addition, advanced potential applications based on Health 4.0 capabilities are not yet being investigated. In this paper we define the main objectives of Health 4.0 and discuss advanced potential Health 4.0 applications. To have a clear understanding of these applications, we categorize them in 4 groups based on the primary beneficiary of these applications. Thus we have patient targeted applications, applications supporting healthcare professionals, resource management applications and high-level healthcare systems management applications. In addition, as we studied the different applications, we realized that these is a certain collection of services that these most of them need regardless of their goals or business context. Services supporting data collection and transfer, security and privacy, reliable operations are some examples. As a result we propose creating a service-oriented middleware framework to offers the common services to the applications developers and facilitate the integration of different services to build applications under the Health 4.0 umbrella.
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- 2020
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50. A client-centered relational framework on barriers to the integration of HIV and substance use services: a systematic review
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Rogério Meireles Pinto, Yun Chen, and Sunggeun ( Ethan) Park
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HIV ,Substance use ,Service integration ,Barriers ,Client-centered relational framework ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Given the close connection between human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and substance use disorder (SUD), access to integrated HIV and SUD services is critical for individuals experiencing both challenges and their biopsychosocial conditions. Method Adopting an integrative method, this systematic review included 23 empirical studies published between 2000 and 2018. Articles investigated providers’ and clients’ perspectives on barriers to accessing integrated HIV and SUD services in various service settings (e.g., HIV primary care, SUD treatment, pharmacy). Results Using a client-centered relational framework, we identified barriers in three relational domains with “the client” as the focus of each: client-provider, client-organization, and client-system. The review shows that (1) barriers to HIV and SUD services do not exist in isolation, but in the dynamics within and across three relational domains; (2) service providers and clients often have different perceptions about what constitutes a barrier and the origin of such barriers; and (3) interprofessional and interorganizational collaborations are crucial for integrating HIV and SUD services. Conclusion This review points out the limitations of the conventional paradigm grouping barriers to service integration into isolated domains (client, provider, organization, or system). Reforms in service arrangements and provider training are recommended to address barriers to integrated services.
- Published
- 2019
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