Collaborative working: who is responsible?

  • Braude P
  • Fertleman M
  • Dhesi J
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Abstract

As delivery of healthcare becomes more complex, there is an increasing need for collaborative working between specialty teams. Recognition of this need has led to new models of care, for example surgeons, anaesthetists and geriatricians working together in the perioperative pathway. Although there is emerging evidence that these collaborative approaches are effective, there is little guidance on who is responsible for the patient throughout the healthcare episode. Government policy and legislation has increasingly focused on the need for a single named clinician to be responsible for the entirety of a patient's episode of care, with overall liability resting with the hospital trust as the provider organisation. This discrepancy between delivery of healthcare by teams and responsibility resting with an individual raises questions: how can clinicians and hospital trusts ensure synergistic patient care while maintaining clear lines of responsibility? Who should provide information to patients throughout the pathway? Who should the patient expect to be the point of contact? This dichotomy emphasises the need for new guidance to support the patient, the clinician and the provider organisation as shared models of care evolve and become embedded into routine practice.

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Braude, P., Fertleman, M., & Dhesi, J. K. (2017). Collaborative working: who is responsible? Future Healthcare Journal, 4(2), 138–141. https://doi.org/10.7861/futurehosp.4-2-138

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