International Journal of Integrated Care
Volume 18, Issue 3, 2018

A qualitative study on primary care integration into an Asian immigrant-specific behavioural health setting in the United States (Article) (Open Access)

Ma K.P.K.* , Saw A.
  • a Department of Psychology, De Paul University, 2219 N. Kenmore Ave, Chicago, United States
  • b Department of Psychology, De Paul University, 2219 N. Kenmore Ave, Chicago, United States

Abstract

Introduction: Integrating primary care and behavioural health services improves access to services and health outcomes among individuals with serious mental illness. Integrated care is particularly promising for racial and ethnic minority individuals given higher rates of chronic illnesses and poorer access to and quality of care compared to Whites. However, little is known about integrated care implementation in non-White populations. The aim of this study is to identify facilitators and barriers to successful implementation of primary care-behavioural health integration in a multilingual behavioural healthcare setting. Methods: Seven focus groups and five semi-structured interviews were conducted with 41 patients and 5 providers participating in integrated care in a community mental health clinic in California serving Asian immigrants. Results: Themes generated from constant comparative analysis suggest limited system-level preconditions and cross-organisational dynamics challenged integrated care. At the same time, changing organisational culture and practice, improving patient-provider and provider-provider communication, and increasing patient involvement enhanced clinical outcomes and facilitated successful implementation. Discussion and conclusions: Findings highlight the importance of patient involvement, peer services and interdisciplinary communication to successfully implement integrated care in the face of linguistic and operational challenges in settings serving multilingual and multicultural patients. © 2018 The Author(s).

Author Keywords

Primary care Behavioural health health disparities ethnic minorities Integrated care

Index Keywords

community mental health clinical outcome immigrant primary medical care health disparity human ethnic group controlled study qualitative research California male semi structured interview female clinical article Article Organizational Culture adult patient participation outcome assessment interdisciplinary communication

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85049978108&doi=10.5334%2fijic.3719&partnerID=40&md5=0504a355416518b0f292ccd234b3e354

DOI: 10.5334/ijic.3719
ISSN: 15684156
Cited by: 1
Original Language: English