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Integration, population commissioning and prison health and well-being – an exploration of benefits and challenges through the study of telemedicine

Integration, population commissioning and prison health and well-being – an exploration of... This paper seeks to understand relationships between prison healthcare and integrated care systems (ICS), including how these affect the delivery of new healthcare interventions. It also aims to understand how closer integration between prison and ICS could improve cross system working between community and prison healthcare teams, and highlights challenges that exist to integration between prison healthcare and ICS.Design/methodology/approachThe study uses evidence from research on the implementation of a pilot study to establish telemedicine secondary care appointments between prisons and an acute trust in one English region (a cross-system intervention). Qualitative interview data were collected from prison (n = 12) and community (n = 8) healthcare staff related to the experience of implementing a cross-system telemedicine initiative. Thematic analysis was undertaken on interview data, guided by an implementation theory and framework.FindingsThe research found four main themes related to the closer integration between prison healthcare and ICS: (1) Recognition of prison health as a priority; (2) Finding a way to reconcile networks and finances between community and prison commissioning; (3) Awareness of prison service influence on NHS healthcare planning and delivery; and (4) Shared investment in prison health can lead to benefits.Originality/valueThis is the first article to provide research evidence to support or challenge the integration of specialist health and justice (H&J) commissioning into local population health. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Integrated Care Emerald Publishing

Integration, population commissioning and prison health and well-being – an exploration of benefits and challenges through the study of telemedicine

Integration, population commissioning and prison health and well-being – an exploration of benefits and challenges through the study of telemedicine

Journal of Integrated Care , Volume 30 (5): 17 – Dec 19, 2022

Abstract

This paper seeks to understand relationships between prison healthcare and integrated care systems (ICS), including how these affect the delivery of new healthcare interventions. It also aims to understand how closer integration between prison and ICS could improve cross system working between community and prison healthcare teams, and highlights challenges that exist to integration between prison healthcare and ICS.Design/methodology/approachThe study uses evidence from research on the implementation of a pilot study to establish telemedicine secondary care appointments between prisons and an acute trust in one English region (a cross-system intervention). Qualitative interview data were collected from prison (n = 12) and community (n = 8) healthcare staff related to the experience of implementing a cross-system telemedicine initiative. Thematic analysis was undertaken on interview data, guided by an implementation theory and framework.FindingsThe research found four main themes related to the closer integration between prison healthcare and ICS: (1) Recognition of prison health as a priority; (2) Finding a way to reconcile networks and finances between community and prison commissioning; (3) Awareness of prison service influence on NHS healthcare planning and delivery; and (4) Shared investment in prison health can lead to benefits.Originality/valueThis is the first article to provide research evidence to support or challenge the integration of specialist health and justice (H&J) commissioning into local population health.

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References (39)

Publisher
Emerald Publishing
Copyright
© Chantal Edge, Nikki Luffingham, Georgia Black and Julie George
ISSN
1476-9018
DOI
10.1108/jica-11-2021-0055
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This paper seeks to understand relationships between prison healthcare and integrated care systems (ICS), including how these affect the delivery of new healthcare interventions. It also aims to understand how closer integration between prison and ICS could improve cross system working between community and prison healthcare teams, and highlights challenges that exist to integration between prison healthcare and ICS.Design/methodology/approachThe study uses evidence from research on the implementation of a pilot study to establish telemedicine secondary care appointments between prisons and an acute trust in one English region (a cross-system intervention). Qualitative interview data were collected from prison (n = 12) and community (n = 8) healthcare staff related to the experience of implementing a cross-system telemedicine initiative. Thematic analysis was undertaken on interview data, guided by an implementation theory and framework.FindingsThe research found four main themes related to the closer integration between prison healthcare and ICS: (1) Recognition of prison health as a priority; (2) Finding a way to reconcile networks and finances between community and prison commissioning; (3) Awareness of prison service influence on NHS healthcare planning and delivery; and (4) Shared investment in prison health can lead to benefits.Originality/valueThis is the first article to provide research evidence to support or challenge the integration of specialist health and justice (H&J) commissioning into local population health.

Journal

Journal of Integrated CareEmerald Publishing

Published: Dec 19, 2022

Keywords: Prison health and well-being; Prisoners; Health and justice; Specialist commissioning; Health inequalities; Resource allocation; Integrated care

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