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Bridging the silos of service delivery for high-need, high-cost individuals

M. Sherry, J.L. Wolff, J. Ballreich, E. DuGoff, K. Davis, G. Anderson
Popul Health Manag

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.

Sherry M, Wolff JL, Ballreich J, DuGoff E, Davis K, Anderson G. Bridging the silos of service delivery for high-need, high-cost individuals. Popul Health Manag. 2016;19(6):421-428. PMID: 27006987. DOI: 10.1089/pop.2015.0147.

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Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Process
Population
Complex Patients
Social Determinant of Health
Not Specified
Study design
Other Study Design