4.6 Article

How can rural community-engaged health services planning achieve sustainable healthcare system changes?

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-047165

Keywords

organisation of health services; qualitative research; change management; health policy; public health

Funding

  1. Joint Standing Committee on Rural Issues through the Ministry of Health and Doctors of BC's Physician Master Agreement

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The Rural Site Visit Project aimed to engage all rural communities in British Columbia, Canada, build relationships, and gather data to inform rural healthcare programs and policies. Using Boelen's health partnership model, qualitative data from 185 meetings in 80 communities identified 36 themes, with overarching themes of Relationships, Autonomy, and Change Over Time.
Objectives The objectives of the Rural Site Visit Project (SV Project) were to develop a successful model for engaging all 201 communities in rural British Columbia, Canada, build relationships and gather data about community healthcare issues to help modify existing rural healthcare programs and inform government rural healthcare policy. Design An adapted version of Boelen's health partnership model was used to identify each community's Health Care Partners: health providers, academics, policy makers, health managers, community representatives and linked sectors. Qualitative data were gathered using a semistructured interview guide. Major themes were identified through content analysis, and this information was fed back to government and interviewees in reports every 6 months. Setting The 107 communities visited thus far have healthcare services that range from hospitals with surgical programs to remote communities with no medical services at all. The majority have access to local primary care. Participants Participants were recruited from the Health Care Partner groups identified above using purposeful and snowball sampling. Primary and secondary outcome measures A successful process was developed to engage rural communities in identifying their healthcare priorities, while simultaneously building and strengthening relationships. The qualitative data were analysed from 185 meetings in 80 communities and shared with policy makers at governmental and community levels. Results 36 themes have been identified and three overarching themes that interconnect all the interviews, namely Relationships, Autonomy and Change Over Time, are discussed. Conclusion The SV Project appears to be unique in that it is physician led, prioritises relationships, engages all of the healthcare partners singly and jointly in each community, is ongoing, provides feedback to both the policy makers and all interviewees on a 6-monthly basis and, by virtue of its large scope, has the ability to produce interim reports that have helped inform system change.

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