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Rural community-centred co-planning for sustainable rural health systems

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posted on 2024-10-11, 01:28 authored by Nerida HyettNerida Hyett, M Hutchinson, D Doyle, T Adem, D Coghill, P Harvey, Catherine LeesCatherine Lees, B O'Sullivan
Objective: Sustaining rural healthcare services is challenging because of numerous systemic factors. Rural communities can inform the design of sustainable rural health models; however, further evidence of effective co-design is needed to guide implementation. The study aim was to co-design a series of place-based and evidence-informed rural health models, to improve local health system sustainability. Setting: A rural region (categorised as Modified Monash Model 5) defined by three adjoining Shires in Central and Northwest Victoria, Australia. Participants: A health executive co-planning network led the co-design, with input and oversight from a broader cross-sector group. Healthcare professionals (n = 44) and consumers and carers (n = 21) participated in interviews, and an online survey was completed by healthcare professionals (n = 11) and consumers and carers (n = 7) to provide feedback on the preliminary results. Design: Community-based participatory action research was applied incorporating co-design methods and systems thinking. Data were collected through qualitative interviews followed by an online feedback survey. Mixed method data analysis (QUAL-quant) was conducted with qualitative directed content analysis of interview transcripts and quantitative descriptive analyses of survey responses to aid prioritisation. Results: Healthcare priorities, strengths and challenges, and proposed rural health models are described. A rural health system sustainability strategy was developed with three integrated pillars: 1. Workforce strengthening, 2. Integrated health services and 3. Innovative models of care. Conclusion: Community-centred co-design with rural health stakeholders was effective for generating locally tailored ideas and potential health models that emulate community strengths and resources, and provide a foundation for further planning, implementation and evaluation.

Funding

This research was funded by Murray Primary Health Network (PHN) through the employment of the chief investigator (NH), and co- investigators (BOS, CL) and a research contract with Monash University (PH). Other members of the research team (MH, TA, DD, DC) also participated during work time which was funded by their health service employer (Northern District Community Health, East Wimmera Health Service, Boort District Health, and Inglewood & Districts Health Service).

History

Publication Date

2024-10-01

Journal

Australian Journal of Rural Health

Volume

32

Issue

5

Pagination

15p. (p. 944-958)

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

1038-5282

Rights Statement

© 2024 The Author(s). Australian Journal of Rural Health published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of National Rural Health Alliance Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.

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