CCTOS: Care
Team Concept
Version 17 July 2016 (created 8 Apr 2013), Etienne Saliez /
- Issues:
- The traditional organisation was based on many independent and
individualistic practices and independent hospital departments. These
organisations did more and more specialise, looking each at only one or
a few aspects of the patient.
- Since the development of very much larger medical knowledge bases, no
one is any more able to cover in depth all the aspect of medicine.
- A patient could always have more than one problem at a time,
particularly aging patients.
- Up to now many commercial softwares have been designed to make life
easier exclisively to a specific target group of customers, for example
either GP, or nurses, or cardiologists, or hospital administrators,
or.... or .... with limited motivations about interoperability.
- Initially when internet was not yet available, most medical record
softwares have been designed as "personal computers". The consequence
is that these different groups of professional users have still today
completely independent software designs, with poor
interoperability.
- Approaches:
- In the scope of the ISfTeH, a new reflexion about how to improve
healthcare, taking advantage of telecommunications tools.
- The start point is the generic concept of "Multidisciplinary
Collaborative Care team", i.e. the team of all the care providers
involved in the care of a common patient. An overview of the global
patient situation should always be shared by all members of the care
team. That said, depending of their specialized profiles, care team
members can go deeper in their specific domains.
- Care Team members are expected to share information in a way intended
to be easily understood by care team colleagues. This is why a
problem list must be maintained. Indeed any new member of the Care
Team, for example in an emergency unit, should always find an up to
date overview of the problems as the first page of the patient
reocrd.
- Care Team coordination:
- Normally the long term coordination is expected to be achieved at
the Primary Care level, by the GP. He is motivated for follow-up
and he should normally receive reports from all the diverse
specialists.
- When necessary the GP may delegate a problem to a specialist, as
well temporarily the coordination during admissions in
hospitals.
- The concept of care team can be implemented in many ways, when
several partners have to collaborate for the same patient. A few
examples in case of typical Care Teams:
- Oncology: GP discovering the problem, organ specialist
analyzing the exact situation, surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy,
home care, ....
- Diabetes: GP, diabetologist, vascular diseases, ophtalmologist,
...
- Developing region: nurse in the village, regional hospital,
center of excellence, international experts.
- Elderly care: follow-up by the GP, multiple disabilities which
may need specialists, care at home.
- Pathology lab: local surgery taking a sample, lab technician
preparing images and providing a provisional conclusion, remote
expert providing a second opinion.
- ...
- Collaboration scenario and efficiency:
- The local actors should go as far as they can, recording their
obserations and provisional understanding of the problems. Having
done that, they may ask a second opinion by experts.
- Experts should find a report made by the first line agent, make
their own evaluation and provide recommendations.