Introducing quality clusters in general practice - a qualitative study of the experiences of cluster coordinators

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Introducing quality clusters in general practice - a qualitative study of the experiences of cluster coordinators. / Kousgaard, Marius Brostrom; Mikkelsen, Thorbjorn Hougaard; Bundgaard, Maria; Madsen, Marie Henriette; Klausen, Morten Bonde; Kristensen, Mads Toft; Kjellberg, Pia Kurstein; Søndergaard, Jens.

In: BMC Primary Care, Vol. 23, No. 1, 215, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kousgaard, MB, Mikkelsen, TH, Bundgaard, M, Madsen, MH, Klausen, MB, Kristensen, MT, Kjellberg, PK & Søndergaard, J 2022, 'Introducing quality clusters in general practice - a qualitative study of the experiences of cluster coordinators', BMC Primary Care, vol. 23, no. 1, 215. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-022-01828-2

APA

Kousgaard, M. B., Mikkelsen, T. H., Bundgaard, M., Madsen, M. H., Klausen, M. B., Kristensen, M. T., Kjellberg, P. K., & Søndergaard, J. (2022). Introducing quality clusters in general practice - a qualitative study of the experiences of cluster coordinators. BMC Primary Care, 23(1), [215]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-022-01828-2

Vancouver

Kousgaard MB, Mikkelsen TH, Bundgaard M, Madsen MH, Klausen MB, Kristensen MT et al. Introducing quality clusters in general practice - a qualitative study of the experiences of cluster coordinators. BMC Primary Care. 2022;23(1). 215. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-022-01828-2

Author

Kousgaard, Marius Brostrom ; Mikkelsen, Thorbjorn Hougaard ; Bundgaard, Maria ; Madsen, Marie Henriette ; Klausen, Morten Bonde ; Kristensen, Mads Toft ; Kjellberg, Pia Kurstein ; Søndergaard, Jens. / Introducing quality clusters in general practice - a qualitative study of the experiences of cluster coordinators. In: BMC Primary Care. 2022 ; Vol. 23, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{f34ccd93fb6b42138f59d6adf700131a,
title = "Introducing quality clusters in general practice - a qualitative study of the experiences of cluster coordinators",
abstract = "Background In 2018, the concept of clusters was introduced as a new model for data-driven quality improvement in general practice in Denmark. However, there is little research on the development and implementation of general practice clusters. The study explores how the cluster coordinators responsible for leading the clusters forward enacted and experienced their role during the early years of the clusters with attention to the challenges and enablers perceived in the process. Methods Qualitative, semi-structured interviews with 25 cluster coordinators from clusters that had carried out at least two meetings on a specific professional topic. The coordinators represented clusters of varying sizes and different geographic locations. Key topics in the interview guide were the development and structure of the cluster, the role of the coordinator, obtainment of data for the meetings, the role of external support, the form and content of the meetings, the participation and engagement of the members. A thematic analysis - shaped by the original aims and categories of the study while also being open to emerging themes - was performed on the transcribed interview material. Results Important enablers in the process of developing the clusters included the positive engagement of the GPs, the support offered by regional quality units and a national quality organisation for general practice, and the funding provided by the formal cluster framework. Challenges initially included setting up the clusters administratively and translating the open cluster concept into a local, workable model; and later obtaining relevant data for the cluster meetings and facilitating peer discussions about the data. Conclusion The coordinators generally experienced that the development of the clusters had progressed relatively fast with engagement from most of the participating GPs. Still, challenges with data obtainment, data analysis, and facilitation will have to be addressed ongoingly. Future research should investigate learning processes at the cluster meetings and how the clusters impact clinical practice and collaborative relations between general practice and other health care providers.",
keywords = "Clusters, Challenges, Enablers, General practice, Quality improvement, Qualitative study",
author = "Kousgaard, {Marius Brostrom} and Mikkelsen, {Thorbjorn Hougaard} and Maria Bundgaard and Madsen, {Marie Henriette} and Klausen, {Morten Bonde} and Kristensen, {Mads Toft} and Kjellberg, {Pia Kurstein} and Jens S{\o}ndergaard",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1186/s12875-022-01828-2",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
journal = "BMC Primary Care",
issn = "2731-4553",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Introducing quality clusters in general practice - a qualitative study of the experiences of cluster coordinators

AU - Kousgaard, Marius Brostrom

AU - Mikkelsen, Thorbjorn Hougaard

AU - Bundgaard, Maria

AU - Madsen, Marie Henriette

AU - Klausen, Morten Bonde

AU - Kristensen, Mads Toft

AU - Kjellberg, Pia Kurstein

AU - Søndergaard, Jens

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Background In 2018, the concept of clusters was introduced as a new model for data-driven quality improvement in general practice in Denmark. However, there is little research on the development and implementation of general practice clusters. The study explores how the cluster coordinators responsible for leading the clusters forward enacted and experienced their role during the early years of the clusters with attention to the challenges and enablers perceived in the process. Methods Qualitative, semi-structured interviews with 25 cluster coordinators from clusters that had carried out at least two meetings on a specific professional topic. The coordinators represented clusters of varying sizes and different geographic locations. Key topics in the interview guide were the development and structure of the cluster, the role of the coordinator, obtainment of data for the meetings, the role of external support, the form and content of the meetings, the participation and engagement of the members. A thematic analysis - shaped by the original aims and categories of the study while also being open to emerging themes - was performed on the transcribed interview material. Results Important enablers in the process of developing the clusters included the positive engagement of the GPs, the support offered by regional quality units and a national quality organisation for general practice, and the funding provided by the formal cluster framework. Challenges initially included setting up the clusters administratively and translating the open cluster concept into a local, workable model; and later obtaining relevant data for the cluster meetings and facilitating peer discussions about the data. Conclusion The coordinators generally experienced that the development of the clusters had progressed relatively fast with engagement from most of the participating GPs. Still, challenges with data obtainment, data analysis, and facilitation will have to be addressed ongoingly. Future research should investigate learning processes at the cluster meetings and how the clusters impact clinical practice and collaborative relations between general practice and other health care providers.

AB - Background In 2018, the concept of clusters was introduced as a new model for data-driven quality improvement in general practice in Denmark. However, there is little research on the development and implementation of general practice clusters. The study explores how the cluster coordinators responsible for leading the clusters forward enacted and experienced their role during the early years of the clusters with attention to the challenges and enablers perceived in the process. Methods Qualitative, semi-structured interviews with 25 cluster coordinators from clusters that had carried out at least two meetings on a specific professional topic. The coordinators represented clusters of varying sizes and different geographic locations. Key topics in the interview guide were the development and structure of the cluster, the role of the coordinator, obtainment of data for the meetings, the role of external support, the form and content of the meetings, the participation and engagement of the members. A thematic analysis - shaped by the original aims and categories of the study while also being open to emerging themes - was performed on the transcribed interview material. Results Important enablers in the process of developing the clusters included the positive engagement of the GPs, the support offered by regional quality units and a national quality organisation for general practice, and the funding provided by the formal cluster framework. Challenges initially included setting up the clusters administratively and translating the open cluster concept into a local, workable model; and later obtaining relevant data for the cluster meetings and facilitating peer discussions about the data. Conclusion The coordinators generally experienced that the development of the clusters had progressed relatively fast with engagement from most of the participating GPs. Still, challenges with data obtainment, data analysis, and facilitation will have to be addressed ongoingly. Future research should investigate learning processes at the cluster meetings and how the clusters impact clinical practice and collaborative relations between general practice and other health care providers.

KW - Clusters

KW - Challenges

KW - Enablers

KW - General practice

KW - Quality improvement

KW - Qualitative study

U2 - 10.1186/s12875-022-01828-2

DO - 10.1186/s12875-022-01828-2

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36008768

VL - 23

JO - BMC Primary Care

JF - BMC Primary Care

SN - 2731-4553

IS - 1

M1 - 215

ER -

ID: 318157281