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Integrative Health Care: The Aritsts' Health Centre finds a Home at the Toronto Western Hospital

This thesis examines an integrative health care (IHC) clinic set within a tertiary hospital located in large city in Canada. The enquiry began by exploring how biomedical and CAM practitioners, artists, hospital administrators, and the Artists’ Health Centre Foundation (AHCF) members interacted, communicated, and collaborated with one another for integrative patient/client care at the Artists’ Health Centre (AHC). Individual stakeholders’ knowledge and attitudes toward IHC are explored, to understand how these affected the everyday interactions among stakeholders. The thesis also examines the organizational structures of the hospital and the AHCF.
The use of qualitative research provided useful in-depth accounts of respondents’ experiences of IHC. Semi-structured focus groups with artists, health-care practitioners, hospital administrators, and AHCF members, and ten in-depth interviews with the health-care practitioners were conducted between June, 2006, and February, 2007. Steps were taken to ensure the trustworthiness of the collected data. Qualitative research software, NVIVO, was used to manage the data.
The findings suggest that despite a perceived lack of scientific evidence, attitudes towards IHC were positively influenced when biomedical practitioners had a personal experience with CAM therapies and when practitioners developed more confidence in their own work. There remained questions about the need for and presence of IHC at the AHC, as neither the hospital nor the AHCF worked in consultation with the practitioners and artists to develop a shared vision of IHC.
The majority of respondents described the level of communication as “sporadic” and one-sided and thus not optimal for creating a communicative environment. Most respondents perceived communication among the stakeholders as one-sided and thus not optimal for creating a communicative environment. There was a lack of understanding regarding scope of practice and how to integrate the various practitioners, particularly CAM. This led to a lack of referrals and had a direct effect on practitioners’ level of confidence. Mechanisms of communication were informal and there were no formalized structures in place to facilitate communication or integration with one another. Additionally, there was no systematic way of charting patient information at the AHC.
Respondents all agreed that IHC was an ideal to strive for and many noted how financial limitations impeded the evolution of integrative health care at AHC, truly forming a barrier to IHC. Strategies for sustainability and management of AHC funds included using a business model or an insurance model.
Important implications of this research include enhancing the current knowledge of teamwork, collaboration, and integration among practitioners in general, and biomedical and CAM practitioners in particular. This research used existing IHC models, interdisciplinary teamwork models, and educational and organizational theories for building a theoretical and conceptual framework of IHC at the AHC. Combining these models with organizational theory shed light on relationship dynamics among CAM and biomedical practitioners while taking into consideration the several structural and process dimensions of integration.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:LACETR/oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:OTU.1807/11263
Date01 August 2008
CreatorsSoklaridis, Sophia
ContributorsLove, Rhonda
Source SetsLibrary and Archives Canada ETDs Repository / Centre d'archives des thèses électroniques de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format1660448 bytes, application/pdf

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