Multidisciplinary providers’ perceptions of care delivery for sleep disorders: A qualitative case study

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Jenesse Kaitz PhD , Varsha G. Vimalananda MD , Martin P. Charns DBA , Gemmae M. Fix PhD
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Abstract

Objectives

Sleep disorders are wide-ranging in their causes and impacts on other physical and mental health conditions. Thus, sleep disorders could benefit from a multidisciplinary approach to assessment and treatment. An integrated care model is often recommended but is costly to implement. We sought to understand how, in the absence of an established organizational structure for integrated sleep care, providers from different clinics work together to provide care for sleep disorders.

Methods

A qualitative case study at one U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) medical center. We used a purposeful nested sampling strategy, combining maximum variation sampling and snowball sampling to recruit key staff involved in sleep care.

Results

We interviewed providers (N = 10) from sleep medicine, primary care, and mental health services. Providers identified the ubiquity of sleep disorders and a concomitant need for multidisciplinary care. However, they described limited opportunities for multidisciplinary interactions and consequently a negative impact on clinical care. Providers described fragmentation in two areas: among sleep specialists and between sleep specialists and other referring and managing providers.

Conclusions

A range of interventions, based on setting and resources, could improve care coordination both among sleep specialists and between sleep and nonsleep providers. While integrated sleep specialist clinics could reduce care fragmentation, they may not directly impact coordination with referring providers, like primary care and general mental health, who are essential in managing chronic conditions. Future work should continue to explore improving care coordination for sleep problems to ensure patients receive high-quality, timely, patient-centered care.

多学科医疗服务提供者对睡眠障碍护理服务的看法:定性案例研究。
目的:睡眠障碍的病因和对其他身心健康状况的影响十分广泛。因此,睡眠障碍可受益于多学科的评估和治疗方法。综合护理模式经常被推荐,但实施起来成本高昂。我们试图了解在没有建立综合睡眠护理组织结构的情况下,来自不同诊所的医疗人员是如何合作提供睡眠障碍护理的:方法:在美国退伍军人事务部(VA)的一家医疗中心进行定性案例研究。我们采用有目的的嵌套抽样策略,结合最大变异抽样和滚雪球抽样,招募参与睡眠护理的主要工作人员:我们采访了来自睡眠医学、初级保健和心理健康服务的提供者(N = 10)。医疗人员发现睡眠障碍无处不在,因此需要多学科护理。然而,他们认为多学科互动的机会有限,因此对临床护理产生了负面影响。医疗服务提供者描述了两个方面的割裂:睡眠专科医生之间以及睡眠专科医生与其他转诊和管理医疗服务提供者之间的割裂:基于环境和资源的一系列干预措施可以改善睡眠专科医生之间以及睡眠和非睡眠医疗服务提供者之间的护理协调。虽然综合睡眠专科门诊可以减少护理的分散性,但可能不会直接影响与转诊医疗服务提供者(如初级保健和普通心理健康)之间的协调,而转诊医疗服务提供者对慢性病的管理至关重要。未来的工作应继续探索如何改善睡眠问题的护理协调,以确保患者获得高质量、及时和以患者为中心的护理。
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来源期刊
Sleep Health
Sleep Health CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
9.80%
发文量
114
审稿时长
54 days
期刊介绍: Sleep Health Journal of the National Sleep Foundation is a multidisciplinary journal that explores sleep''s role in population health and elucidates the social science perspective on sleep and health. Aligned with the National Sleep Foundation''s global authoritative, evidence-based voice for sleep health, the journal serves as the foremost publication for manuscripts that advance the sleep health of all members of society.The scope of the journal extends across diverse sleep-related fields, including anthropology, education, health services research, human development, international health, law, mental health, nursing, nutrition, psychology, public health, public policy, fatigue management, transportation, social work, and sociology. The journal welcomes original research articles, review articles, brief reports, special articles, letters to the editor, editorials, and commentaries.
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