4.1 Article

Bridging the Silos of Service Delivery for High-Need, High-Cost Individuals

Journal

POPULATION HEALTH MANAGEMENT
Volume 19, Issue 6, Pages 421-428

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/pop.2015.0147

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Funding

  1. Commonwealth Fund

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Health care reform efforts that emphasize value have increased awareness of the importance of nonmedical factors in achieving better care, better health, and lower costs in the care of high-need, high-cost individuals. Programs that care for socioeconomically disadvantaged, high-need, high-cost individuals have achieved promising results in part by bridging traditional service delivery silos. This study examined 5 innovative community-oriented programs that are successfully coordinating medical and nonmedical services to identify factors that stimulate and sustain community-level collaboration and coordinated care across silos of health care, public health, and social services delivery. The authors constructed a conceptual framework depicting community health systems that highlights 4 foundational factors that facilitate community-oriented collaboration: flexible financing, shared leadership, shared data, and a strong shared vision of commitment toward delivery of person-centered care.

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