Assessment of older persons with multimorbidity in Norwegian primary care: a qualitative study of healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences in fostering continuity of care

Abstract Background As the population ages, more people live longer with multimorbidity. Older people with multimorbidity face diverse needs and medical conditions, increasing the risk of adverse health outcomes, and often experience fragmented healthcare. Research has called for better ways to reac...

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Main Authors: Turid Rimereit Aarønes, Kristin Taraldsen, Linda Aimée Hartford Kvæl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-01-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-12185-4
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author Turid Rimereit Aarønes
Kristin Taraldsen
Linda Aimée Hartford Kvæl
author_facet Turid Rimereit Aarønes
Kristin Taraldsen
Linda Aimée Hartford Kvæl
author_sort Turid Rimereit Aarønes
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background As the population ages, more people live longer with multimorbidity. Older people with multimorbidity face diverse needs and medical conditions, increasing the risk of adverse health outcomes, and often experience fragmented healthcare. Research has called for better ways to reach, understand and care for this group to enhance care continuity. This study aimed to examine healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences as they relate to assessments’ role in promoting care continuity for home-dwelling older patients with multimorbidity in community-based healthcare. Methods This qualitative study acquired qualitative data from 17 healthcare professionals from reablement teams, interdisciplinary teams, rehabilitation teams and home nursing in three Norwegian municipalities. Representing nursing, physiotherapy, occupational therapy and social work, all participants were experienced in assessing older home-dwelling patients with multimorbidity. Semi-structured focus group and individual interviews were conducted, then the interviews were transcribed and analysed using reflexive thematic analysis. Results The analysis elicited three themes: gaining insight beyond diagnoses to promote relational continuity, facilitating interaction to ensure informational continuity, and linking patient journeys to facilitate managerial continuity. The themes underscore the significance of evaluating patients beyond their medical conditions, emphasising assessment’s collaborative nature across disciplines. Healthcare professionals use diverse assessment methods and facilitate interaction to understand patients’ needs. Working together across different healthcare professions is key for care that includes the whole patient, but challenges such as underutilisation of assessments and poor documentation still exist. Furthermore, linking patient journeys remains difficult due to fragmented services and limited resources. Despite these challenges, assessments were viewed as crucial to care continuity. Conclusions In this qualitative study, healthcare professionals emphasised that assessment is a complex, continuous process due to the fluctuating health of individuals with multimorbidity. Effective instruments and diverse assessment methods are essential to understanding all aspects of patients’ health and well-being to ensure care continuity across individual, service, and system levels. Our findings highlight the need for systematic and structured use of assessments to improve interdisciplinary collaboration and personalised care for older individuals with multimorbidity. Understanding the patient journey is crucial for achieving these goals, potentially benefiting healthcare professionals, policymakers, and primary care providers.
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spelling doaj-art-39ef06e93ccb4dec92fdfa6d90d543642025-01-05T12:12:23ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632025-01-0125111310.1186/s12913-024-12185-4Assessment of older persons with multimorbidity in Norwegian primary care: a qualitative study of healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences in fostering continuity of careTurid Rimereit Aarønes0Kristin Taraldsen1Linda Aimée Hartford Kvæl2Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Rehabilitation Science and Health Technology, OsloMet – Oslo Metropolitan UniversityFaculty of Health Sciences, Department of Rehabilitation Science and Health Technology, OsloMet – Oslo Metropolitan UniversityFaculty of Health Sciences, Department of Rehabilitation Science and Health Technology, OsloMet – Oslo Metropolitan UniversityAbstract Background As the population ages, more people live longer with multimorbidity. Older people with multimorbidity face diverse needs and medical conditions, increasing the risk of adverse health outcomes, and often experience fragmented healthcare. Research has called for better ways to reach, understand and care for this group to enhance care continuity. This study aimed to examine healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences as they relate to assessments’ role in promoting care continuity for home-dwelling older patients with multimorbidity in community-based healthcare. Methods This qualitative study acquired qualitative data from 17 healthcare professionals from reablement teams, interdisciplinary teams, rehabilitation teams and home nursing in three Norwegian municipalities. Representing nursing, physiotherapy, occupational therapy and social work, all participants were experienced in assessing older home-dwelling patients with multimorbidity. Semi-structured focus group and individual interviews were conducted, then the interviews were transcribed and analysed using reflexive thematic analysis. Results The analysis elicited three themes: gaining insight beyond diagnoses to promote relational continuity, facilitating interaction to ensure informational continuity, and linking patient journeys to facilitate managerial continuity. The themes underscore the significance of evaluating patients beyond their medical conditions, emphasising assessment’s collaborative nature across disciplines. Healthcare professionals use diverse assessment methods and facilitate interaction to understand patients’ needs. Working together across different healthcare professions is key for care that includes the whole patient, but challenges such as underutilisation of assessments and poor documentation still exist. Furthermore, linking patient journeys remains difficult due to fragmented services and limited resources. Despite these challenges, assessments were viewed as crucial to care continuity. Conclusions In this qualitative study, healthcare professionals emphasised that assessment is a complex, continuous process due to the fluctuating health of individuals with multimorbidity. Effective instruments and diverse assessment methods are essential to understanding all aspects of patients’ health and well-being to ensure care continuity across individual, service, and system levels. Our findings highlight the need for systematic and structured use of assessments to improve interdisciplinary collaboration and personalised care for older individuals with multimorbidity. Understanding the patient journey is crucial for achieving these goals, potentially benefiting healthcare professionals, policymakers, and primary care providers.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-12185-4AssessmentInterdisciplinary collaborationCare continuityPerson-centred careHolistic understandingPrimary care
spellingShingle Turid Rimereit Aarønes
Kristin Taraldsen
Linda Aimée Hartford Kvæl
Assessment of older persons with multimorbidity in Norwegian primary care: a qualitative study of healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences in fostering continuity of care
BMC Health Services Research
Assessment
Interdisciplinary collaboration
Care continuity
Person-centred care
Holistic understanding
Primary care
title Assessment of older persons with multimorbidity in Norwegian primary care: a qualitative study of healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences in fostering continuity of care
title_full Assessment of older persons with multimorbidity in Norwegian primary care: a qualitative study of healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences in fostering continuity of care
title_fullStr Assessment of older persons with multimorbidity in Norwegian primary care: a qualitative study of healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences in fostering continuity of care
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of older persons with multimorbidity in Norwegian primary care: a qualitative study of healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences in fostering continuity of care
title_short Assessment of older persons with multimorbidity in Norwegian primary care: a qualitative study of healthcare professionals’ experiences and preferences in fostering continuity of care
title_sort assessment of older persons with multimorbidity in norwegian primary care a qualitative study of healthcare professionals experiences and preferences in fostering continuity of care
topic Assessment
Interdisciplinary collaboration
Care continuity
Person-centred care
Holistic understanding
Primary care
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-12185-4
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