4.0 Article

Care plans and care planning in long-term conditions: a conceptual model

Journal

PRIMARY HEALTH CARE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 342-354

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1463423613000327

Keywords

care planning; chronic diseases; physician-patient relations; self-management; shared decision making

Funding

  1. UK Department of Health Policy Research Programme [077/0016]
  2. Policy Research Programme in the Department of Health
  3. National Institutes of Health Research (NIHR) [077/0016] Funding Source: National Institutes of Health Research (NIHR)
  4. National Institute for Health Research [CL-2009-06-004] Funding Source: researchfish

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The prevalence and impact of long-term conditions continues to rise. Care planning for people with long-term conditions has been a policy priority for chronic disease management in a number of health-care systems. However, patients and providers appear unclear about the formulation and implementation of care planning. Further work in this area is therefore required to inform the development, implementation and evaluation of future care planning initiatives. We distinguish between 'care planning' (the process by which health-care professionals and patients discuss, agree and review an action plan to achieve the goals or behaviour change of most relevance and concern to the patient) and a 'care plan' (a written document recording the outcome of a care planning process). We propose a typology of care planning and care plans with three core dimensions: perspective (patient or professional), scope (a focus on goals or on behaviours) and networks (confined to the professional-patient dyad or extending to the entire care network). In addition, we draw on psychological models of mediation and moderation to outline potential mechanisms through which care planning and care plans may lead to improved outcomes for both patients and the wider health-care system. The proposed typology of care planning and care plans offered here, along with the model of the process by which care planning may influence outcomes, provide a useful framework for future policy developments and evaluations. Empirical work is required to explore the degree to which current care planning approaches and care plans can be described according to these dimensions, and the factors that determine which types of patients and professionals use which type of care plans.

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