From hospital-centered care to home-centered care of older people: propositions for research and development.

J Health Organ Manag

Department of Management and Engineering, Linkopings Universitet, Linkoping, Sweden.

Published: January 2024

Purpose: Providing high-quality and cost-efficient care of older people is an important development priority for many health and social care systems in the world. This paper suggests a shift from acute, episodic and reactive hospital-centered care toward longitudinal, person-centered and proactive home-centered care. The purpose of this paper is to contribute to the knowledge of a comprehensive development strategy for designing and providing home-centered care of older people.

Design/methodology/approach: The study design is based on qualitative research with an inductive approach. The authors study development initiatives at the national, regional and local levels of the Swedish health and social care system. The data collection methods included interviews ( = 54), meeting observations ( = 25) and document studies ( = 59).

Findings: The authors describe findings related to policy actions and system changes, attempts to achieve collaboration, integration and coordination, new forms of care offerings, characteristics of work settings at home and differences in patients' roles and participation at home and in the hospital.

Practical Implications: The authors suggest home-centered care as a solution for providing person-centered and integrated care of older people and give examples of how this can be achieved.

Originality/value: The authors outline five propositions for research and development related to national policies, service modularity as a solution for customized and coordinated care, developing human resources and infrastructure for home settings, expanding services that enable older people living at home and patient co-creation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10879925PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/JHOM-03-2023-0077DOI Listing

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