美国儿童医院的多部门合作解决健康的社会驱动因素。

Ulfat Shaikh, Melissa Gosdin, Elizabeth Helmke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:儿童健康受到一系列社会因素的影响。这就需要在多个部门的合作下采取多管齐下的儿科护理方法。儿童医院拥有独特的专门知识和资源,可以确定儿童保健方面的紧迫问题,并与社区组织和地方理事机构合作,解决儿童保健方面的差距。本研究的目标是确定美国儿童医院参与的多部门合作、这些努力的推动者和挑战,以及医院可以采用的实施和维持这种合作的最佳做法。方法:采用以下方法进行环境扫描:对35家儿童医院的社区卫生需求评估(CHNA)和实施策略进行内容分析,并对14家精选儿童医院管理社区伙伴关系的负责人进行半结构化定性访谈。这个有目的的样本被选择为全国代表性,包括地理位置,规模和儿科医院的类型。定性的关系分析可以探索中国文献中的描述性和解释性含义。录音被转录,访谈指南聚焦于实用稳健实施和可持续发展模型(PRISM)实施科学框架的领域,访谈由一个定性研究团队进行和分析。结果:大多数医院参与了多部门合作,解决了健康差距问题。最常确定的优先事项包括心理和行为健康、获得保健服务、社区安全和暴力预防、幼儿教育和慢性病预防。主要的挑战是用于多部门合作的资金有限,缺乏在多部门工作方面受过培训和有经验的工作人员,以及社区伙伴的准备程度不一。促进因素包括充足的人员配备和资金、社区信任以及建立现有的伙伴关系。所有医院都强调,必须在社区内建立信任,这是实施成功的多部门合作的关键因素。最佳实践包括检查医院的内部组织以避免工作重复,利用现有的医院资源来支持地方倡议,纳入社区合作伙伴并在财政上支持他们的努力,创造与社区合作伙伴双向沟通的途径,衡量和跟踪合作的有效性,以及发展基础设施以确保项目在人员流动的情况下继续推进。结论:努力将儿童卫生保健从疾病保健系统转变为社区综合系统,需要儿童医院与社区组织合作,以扩大其覆盖范围和有效性。这些发现可用于制定战略,在儿童医院实施和维持未来的多部门合作,以有效利用其现有优势和资源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Multisector Collaborations at Children's Hospitals in the United States to Address Social Drivers of Health.

Background: Child health is influenced by a range of social drivers. This necessitates a multipronged approach to pediatric care with collaborative efforts of multiple sectors. Children's hospitals have unique expertise and resources to identify pressing issues in child health and partner with community organizations and local governing bodies to address gaps in child health. The goal of this study was to identify multisector collaborations that children's hospitals in the United States engage in, facilitators and challenges of these efforts, and best practices that hospitals can employ to implement and sustain such collaborations.

Methods: An environmental scan was conducted utilizing the following approaches: a content analysis of Community Health Needs Assessments (CHNA) and implementation strategies at 35 children's hospitals, and semi-structured qualitative interviews with leaders who manage community partnerships at 14 select children's hospitals. This purposive sample was selected for national representation, including geographic location, size, and type of pediatric hospital. Qualitative relational analysis enabled exploration of descriptive and interpretive meanings within CHNA documents. Audio recordings were transcribed, the interview guide focused on domains of the Practical Robust Implementation and Sustainability Model (PRISM) implementation science framework, and interviews were conducted and analyzed by a team of qualitative researchers.

Results: Most hospitals engaged in multisector collaborations that addressed health disparities. The most frequently identified priorities included mental and behavioral health, access to health services, neighborhood safety and violence prevention, early childhood education, and chronic disease prevention. Key challenges were limited funding for multisector collaboration, shortage of staff with training and experience in multisector work, and variable readiness of community partners. Facilitators included adequate staffing and funding, community trust, and building on existing partnerships. All hospitals highlighted the crucial need to build trust within the community as a key factor to implement successful multisector collaborations. Best practices included examining the hospital's internal organization to avoid duplication of efforts, leveraging existing hospital resources to support local initiatives, incorporating community partners and financially supporting their efforts, creating avenues for bidirectional communication with community partners, measuring and tracking effectiveness of collaborations, and developing infrastructures to keep projects moving forward despite staff turnover.

Conclusion: Efforts to transform child health care from sick-care systems to community-integrated systems require children's hospitals to partner with community-based organizations to extend their reach and effectiveness. These findings can be used to develop strategies to implement and sustain future multisector collaborations at children's hospitals to effectively leverage their existing strengths and resources.

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