» Articles » PMID: 11989959

Construction of a GP Integration Model

Overview
Journal Soc Sci Med
Date 2002 May 7
PMID 11989959
Citations 10
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

There are frequent calls to improve integration of health services, within and between primary and secondary care sectors. In Australia, general medical practitioners (GPs) are central to these endeavours. This paper aims to better conceptualise GP integration and to develop a model and index based on this. A conceptualisation of integration is proposed based on integration fundamentally as an activity or process not structure. Integration process is the frequency and quality of episodes of information exchange involving the GP and another practitioner or patient and aimed at fulfilling the objectives of the health care system with regard to patient care. These are both direct responses to structural forces and emergent GP capacities and dispositions. The content of this typology was studied using Concept Mapping in 11 groups of GPs, consumers and other practitioners. Clusters of related statements within thematic domains were used as the basis for a provisional model. This was tested using confirmatory factor analysis in a data set derived from a national probability sample of 501 GPs. Some re-specification of the model was necessary, with three integration process factors needing to be subdivided. One factor congeneric model assumptions were used to identify the constituent items for these factors. The result was a model in which 50 items measured nine integration process factors and 20 items measured five enabling factors. Two distinct but correlated higher order factors, relating to individual patient care and public (or community) health--in contrast to a single higher order factor for integration--were identified. The re-specified model was tested with a new sample of 151 GPs and exhibited strong psychometric properties. Reliability and validity were acceptable to this stage of the indices' development. Further testing of the index is necessary to demonstrate factor invariance of the indices in other contexts as well as their utility in cross-structural analysis. That said, the indices have immediate uses.

Citing Articles

Strengthening healthcare providers' leadership capabilities, interprofessional collaboration, and systems thinking: a conceptualization of the Clinical Scholars program impact.

Carr T, Rosas S, Noble C, Song M, Fernandez C, Brandert K BMC Med Educ. 2024; 24(1):1277.

PMID: 39511650 PMC: 11542269. DOI: 10.1186/s12909-024-06240-1.


The systematic development of a complex intervention: HealthMap, an online self-management support program for people with HIV.

Millard T, Dodson S, McDonald K, M Klassen K, Osborne R, Battersby M BMC Infect Dis. 2018; 18(1):615.

PMID: 30509195 PMC: 6278155. DOI: 10.1186/s12879-018-3518-6.


Sharing of clinical data in a maternity setting: how do paper hand-held records and electronic health records compare for completeness?.

Hawley G, Jackson C, Hepworth J, Wilkinson S BMC Health Serv Res. 2014; 14:650.

PMID: 25528664 PMC: 4302146. DOI: 10.1186/s12913-014-0650-x.


In a maternity shared-care environment, what do we know about the paper hand-held and electronic health record: a systematic literature review.

Hawley G, Janamian T, Jackson C, Wilkinson S BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2014; 14:52.

PMID: 24475912 PMC: 3912922. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-14-52.


Developing an action model for integration of health system response to HIV/AIDS and noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) in developing countries.

Haregu T, Setswe G, Elliott J, Oldenburg B Glob J Health Sci. 2013; 6(1):9-22.

PMID: 24373260 PMC: 4825372. DOI: 10.5539/gjhs.v6n1p9.