People-centred integration in a refugee primary care service: a complex adaptive systems perspective
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Date
Authors
Phillips, Christine
Hall, Sally
Elmitt, Nicholas
Bookallil, Marianne
Douglas, Kirsty
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Publisher
Emerald
Abstract
PURPOSE – Services for refugees and asylum seekers frequently experience gaps in delivery and access, poor
coordination, and service stress. The purpose of this paper is to examine the approach to integrated care
within Companion House (CH), a refugee primary care service, whose service mix includes counselling,
medical care, community development, and advocacy. Like all Australian refugee and asylum seeker support
services, CH operates within an uncertain policy environment, constantly adapting to funding challenges, and
changing needs of patient populations.
DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH – Interviews with staff, social network analysis, group patient interviews,
and service mapping.
FINDINGS – CH has created fluid links between teams, and encouraged open dialogue with client populations.
There is a high level of networking between staff, much of it informal. This is underpinned by horizontal
management and staff commitment to a shared mission and an ethos of mutual respect. The clinical teams are
collectively oriented towards patients but not necessarily towards each other.
RESEARCH LIMITATIONS/IMPLICATIONS – Part of the service’s resilience and ongoing service orientation is due
to the fostering of an emergent self-organising form of integration through a complex adaptive systems
approach. The outcome of this integration is characterised through the metaphors of “home” for patients, and
“family” for staff. CH’s model of integration has relevance for other services for marginalised populations with
complex service needs.
ORIGINALITY/VALUE – This study provides new evidence on the importance of both formal and informal
communication, and that limited formal integration between clinical teams is no bar to integration as an
outcome for patients.
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Source
Journal of Integrated Care
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Access Statement
Open Access