Exploring organisational support to apply best practice in the sick leave and rehabilitation process from a multiprofessional front-line perspective: a qualitative study
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2024

Objectives To explore the experiences of organisational support to apply best practices held by front-line employees working with patients in the sick leave and rehabilitation process (SRP). Design Qualitative study design. Data were collected with focus group interviews in Region V & auml;stra G & ouml;taland, Sweden. Participants discussed their perceptions of organisational support to apply the best SRP practice in a primary healthcare context. Participants Purposive sampling was conducted to capture a range of experiences among various professionals, including general practitioners (n=6), rehabilitation coordinators, other primary healthcare professionals (n=13) and caseworkers from the Social Insurance Agency, Employment Agency and Social Services (n=12). Results Informants perceived that their good intentions to work for the best interests of each patient were not enough to overcome inadequate organisational prerequisites. Identified themes described unequal care due to significant practice variation, conflicting messages, a situation where the patient loses control and mismatch between available support and patient needs. Perceived potential consequences for the patients included legal uncertainty of assessments, harmful passivity of the individual through misapplied sick leave and the risk of overlooking non-medical factors that could be managed in a safer and more well-adapted way. Conclusions Neither guidelines on person-centred approaches, nor laws regulating the right to coordinated individual planning, seem to have fulfilled the intended purpose. The informants depicted an SRP obstructing individualised care, thus risking worsening patients' well-being and abilities. The opportunities to improve the quality of the processes within the SRP, and simultaneously make them more effective, appear to be extensive.

Patient-Centered Care

HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION & MANAGEMENT

Primary Health Care

QUALITATIVE RESEARCH

Författare

Marit Lofgren

Göteborgs universitet

Daniel Gyllenhammar

Chalmers, Teknikens ekonomi och organisation, Service Management and Logistics

Dominique Hange

Göteborgs universitet

Lena Nordeman

Göteborgs universitet

Gun Rembeck

Göteborgs universitet

Cecilia Bjorkelund

Göteborgs universitet

Irene Svenningsson

Göteborgs universitet

Karin Tornbom

Göteborgs universitet

BMJ Open

2044-6055 (ISSN) 20446055 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 11 e085826

Ämneskategorier

Omvårdnad

DOI

10.1136/bmjopen-2024-085826

PubMed

39515862

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2024-11-27