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Adaptive practices in heart failure care teams: implications for patient-centered care in the context of complexity

BACKGROUND: Heart failure (HF), one of the three leading causes of death, is a chronic, progressive, incurable disease. There is growing support for integration of palliative care’s holistic approach to suffering, but insufficient understanding of how this would happen in the complex team context of...

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Autores principales: Tait, Glendon R, Bates, Joanna, LaDonna, Kori A, Schulz, Valerie N, Strachan, Patricia H, McDougall, Allan, Lingard, Lorelei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4547636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26316775
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JMDH.S85817
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author Tait, Glendon R
Bates, Joanna
LaDonna, Kori A
Schulz, Valerie N
Strachan, Patricia H
McDougall, Allan
Lingard, Lorelei
author_facet Tait, Glendon R
Bates, Joanna
LaDonna, Kori A
Schulz, Valerie N
Strachan, Patricia H
McDougall, Allan
Lingard, Lorelei
author_sort Tait, Glendon R
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Heart failure (HF), one of the three leading causes of death, is a chronic, progressive, incurable disease. There is growing support for integration of palliative care’s holistic approach to suffering, but insufficient understanding of how this would happen in the complex team context of HF care. This study examined how HF care teams, as defined by patients, work together to provide care to patients with advanced disease. METHODS: Team members were identified by each participating patient, generating team sampling units (TSUs) for each patient. Drawn from five study sites in three Canadian provinces, our dataset consists of 209 interviews from 50 TSUs. Drawing on a theoretical framing of HF teams as complex adaptive systems (CAS), interviews were analyzed using the constant comparative method associated with constructivist grounded theory. RESULTS: This paper centers on the dominant theme of system practices, how HF care delivery is reported to work organizationally, socially, and practically, and describes two subthemes: “the way things work around here”, which were commonplace, routine ways of doing things, and “the way we make things work around here”, which were more conscious, effortful adaptations to usual practice in response to emergent needs. An adaptive practice, often a small alteration to routine, could have amplified effects beyond those intended by the innovating team member and could extend to other settings. CONCLUSION: Adaptive practices emerged unpredictably and were variably experienced by team members. Our study offers an empirically grounded explanation of how HF care teams self-organize and how adaptive practices emerge from nonlinear interdependencies among diverse agents. We use these insights to reframe the question of palliative care integration, to ask how best to foster palliative care-aligned adaptive practices in HF care. This work has implications for health care’s growing challenge of providing care to those with chronic medical illness in complex, team-based settings.
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spelling pubmed-45476362015-08-27 Adaptive practices in heart failure care teams: implications for patient-centered care in the context of complexity Tait, Glendon R Bates, Joanna LaDonna, Kori A Schulz, Valerie N Strachan, Patricia H McDougall, Allan Lingard, Lorelei J Multidiscip Healthc Original Research BACKGROUND: Heart failure (HF), one of the three leading causes of death, is a chronic, progressive, incurable disease. There is growing support for integration of palliative care’s holistic approach to suffering, but insufficient understanding of how this would happen in the complex team context of HF care. This study examined how HF care teams, as defined by patients, work together to provide care to patients with advanced disease. METHODS: Team members were identified by each participating patient, generating team sampling units (TSUs) for each patient. Drawn from five study sites in three Canadian provinces, our dataset consists of 209 interviews from 50 TSUs. Drawing on a theoretical framing of HF teams as complex adaptive systems (CAS), interviews were analyzed using the constant comparative method associated with constructivist grounded theory. RESULTS: This paper centers on the dominant theme of system practices, how HF care delivery is reported to work organizationally, socially, and practically, and describes two subthemes: “the way things work around here”, which were commonplace, routine ways of doing things, and “the way we make things work around here”, which were more conscious, effortful adaptations to usual practice in response to emergent needs. An adaptive practice, often a small alteration to routine, could have amplified effects beyond those intended by the innovating team member and could extend to other settings. CONCLUSION: Adaptive practices emerged unpredictably and were variably experienced by team members. Our study offers an empirically grounded explanation of how HF care teams self-organize and how adaptive practices emerge from nonlinear interdependencies among diverse agents. We use these insights to reframe the question of palliative care integration, to ask how best to foster palliative care-aligned adaptive practices in HF care. This work has implications for health care’s growing challenge of providing care to those with chronic medical illness in complex, team-based settings. Dove Medical Press 2015-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4547636/ /pubmed/26316775 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JMDH.S85817 Text en © 2015 Tait et al. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Tait, Glendon R
Bates, Joanna
LaDonna, Kori A
Schulz, Valerie N
Strachan, Patricia H
McDougall, Allan
Lingard, Lorelei
Adaptive practices in heart failure care teams: implications for patient-centered care in the context of complexity
title Adaptive practices in heart failure care teams: implications for patient-centered care in the context of complexity
title_full Adaptive practices in heart failure care teams: implications for patient-centered care in the context of complexity
title_fullStr Adaptive practices in heart failure care teams: implications for patient-centered care in the context of complexity
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive practices in heart failure care teams: implications for patient-centered care in the context of complexity
title_short Adaptive practices in heart failure care teams: implications for patient-centered care in the context of complexity
title_sort adaptive practices in heart failure care teams: implications for patient-centered care in the context of complexity
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4547636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26316775
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JMDH.S85817
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