Co-location as a Driver for Cross-Sectoral Collaboration with General Practitioners as Coordinators: The Case of a Danish Municipal Health Centre

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Co-location as a Driver for Cross-Sectoral Collaboration with General Practitioners as Coordinators : The Case of a Danish Municipal Health Centre. / Scheele, Christian Elling; Vrangbæk, Karsten.

In: International Journal of Integrated Care, Vol. 16, No. 4, 15, 05.12.2016.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Scheele, CE & Vrangbæk, K 2016, 'Co-location as a Driver for Cross-Sectoral Collaboration with General Practitioners as Coordinators: The Case of a Danish Municipal Health Centre', International Journal of Integrated Care, vol. 16, no. 4, 15. https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.2471

APA

Scheele, C. E., & Vrangbæk, K. (2016). Co-location as a Driver for Cross-Sectoral Collaboration with General Practitioners as Coordinators: The Case of a Danish Municipal Health Centre. International Journal of Integrated Care, 16(4), [15]. https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.2471

Vancouver

Scheele CE, Vrangbæk K. Co-location as a Driver for Cross-Sectoral Collaboration with General Practitioners as Coordinators: The Case of a Danish Municipal Health Centre. International Journal of Integrated Care. 2016 Dec 5;16(4). 15. https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.2471

Author

Scheele, Christian Elling ; Vrangbæk, Karsten. / Co-location as a Driver for Cross-Sectoral Collaboration with General Practitioners as Coordinators : The Case of a Danish Municipal Health Centre. In: International Journal of Integrated Care. 2016 ; Vol. 16, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{be74426c23e24e2ab14ccf7f3f334cde,
title = "Co-location as a Driver for Cross-Sectoral Collaboration with General Practitioners as Coordinators: The Case of a Danish Municipal Health Centre",
abstract = "The issue of integrated care and inter-sectoral collaboration is on the health policy agenda in many countries. Yet, there is limited knowledge about the effects of the different policy instruments used to achieve this. This paper studies co-location as a driver for cross-sectoral collaboration with general practitioners (GPs) acting as coordinators in a municipal health centre. The purpose of the health centre, which is staffed by health professionals from municipal, regional and private sectors, is to provide primary health services to the citizens of the municipality. Co-locating these professionals is supposed to benefit e.g., elder citizens and patients with chronic diseases who frequently require services from health professionals across administrative sectors.Methodologically, the analysis is based on qualitative data in the form of semi-structured interviews with the health professionals employed at the health centre and with administrative managers from municipal and regional government levels. The study finds that co-location does not function as a driver for cross-sectoral collaboration in a health centre when GPs act as coordinators. Cross-sectoral collaboration is hampered by the general practitioners{\textquoteright} work routines and professional identity, by organisational factors and by a lack of clarity concerning the content of collaboration with regard to economic and professional incentives.",
author = "Scheele, {Christian Elling} and Karsten Vrangb{\ae}k",
year = "2016",
month = dec,
day = "5",
doi = "10.5334/ijic.2471",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
journal = "International Journal of Integrated Care",
issn = "1568-4156",
publisher = "Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Co-location as a Driver for Cross-Sectoral Collaboration with General Practitioners as Coordinators

T2 - The Case of a Danish Municipal Health Centre

AU - Scheele, Christian Elling

AU - Vrangbæk, Karsten

PY - 2016/12/5

Y1 - 2016/12/5

N2 - The issue of integrated care and inter-sectoral collaboration is on the health policy agenda in many countries. Yet, there is limited knowledge about the effects of the different policy instruments used to achieve this. This paper studies co-location as a driver for cross-sectoral collaboration with general practitioners (GPs) acting as coordinators in a municipal health centre. The purpose of the health centre, which is staffed by health professionals from municipal, regional and private sectors, is to provide primary health services to the citizens of the municipality. Co-locating these professionals is supposed to benefit e.g., elder citizens and patients with chronic diseases who frequently require services from health professionals across administrative sectors.Methodologically, the analysis is based on qualitative data in the form of semi-structured interviews with the health professionals employed at the health centre and with administrative managers from municipal and regional government levels. The study finds that co-location does not function as a driver for cross-sectoral collaboration in a health centre when GPs act as coordinators. Cross-sectoral collaboration is hampered by the general practitioners’ work routines and professional identity, by organisational factors and by a lack of clarity concerning the content of collaboration with regard to economic and professional incentives.

AB - The issue of integrated care and inter-sectoral collaboration is on the health policy agenda in many countries. Yet, there is limited knowledge about the effects of the different policy instruments used to achieve this. This paper studies co-location as a driver for cross-sectoral collaboration with general practitioners (GPs) acting as coordinators in a municipal health centre. The purpose of the health centre, which is staffed by health professionals from municipal, regional and private sectors, is to provide primary health services to the citizens of the municipality. Co-locating these professionals is supposed to benefit e.g., elder citizens and patients with chronic diseases who frequently require services from health professionals across administrative sectors.Methodologically, the analysis is based on qualitative data in the form of semi-structured interviews with the health professionals employed at the health centre and with administrative managers from municipal and regional government levels. The study finds that co-location does not function as a driver for cross-sectoral collaboration in a health centre when GPs act as coordinators. Cross-sectoral collaboration is hampered by the general practitioners’ work routines and professional identity, by organisational factors and by a lack of clarity concerning the content of collaboration with regard to economic and professional incentives.

U2 - 10.5334/ijic.2471

DO - 10.5334/ijic.2471

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28316555

VL - 16

JO - International Journal of Integrated Care

JF - International Journal of Integrated Care

SN - 1568-4156

IS - 4

M1 - 15

ER -

ID: 169140443