6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1265d56

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Promoting coordination in Norwegian health care

Brynjar LandmarkTor Inge RomørenDag Olaf Torjesen

subject

Health (social science)Index (economics)Sociology and Political ScienceDenmarkNorwegianNursing:Medical disciplines: 700::Health sciences: 800::Health service and health administration research: 806 [VDP]Health carereform plansMedicineCoordination; primary healthcare sector; secondary health sector; reform plans; Norway; Denmark; SwedenGeneralLiterature_REFERENCE(e.g.dictionariesencyclopediasglossaries)Health policySwedenHRHISlcsh:R5-920business.industryNorwayHealth Policylanguage.human_languageIntegrated carePeer reviewCoordinationlanguagebusinesslcsh:Medicine (General)Norwegian health caresecondary health sectorprimary healthcare sector

description

This is the journal's version originally published in International Journal of Integrated Care. This article is designet as ”Open Access”. © International Journal of Integrated Care: http://www.ijic.org/index.php/ijic/index Introduction: The Norwegian health care system is well organized within its two main sectors - primary health and long term care on the one hand, and hospitals and specialist services on the other. However, the relation between them lacks mediating structures. Policy practice: Enhancing coordination between primary and secondary health care has been central in Norwegian health care policy the last decade. In 2003 a committee was appointed to identify coordination problems and proposed a lot of practical and organisational recommendations. It relied on an approach challenging primary and secondary health care in shared geographical regions to take action. However, these proposals were not implemented. In 2008 a new Minister of Health and Care worked out plans under the key term "Coordination Reform". These reform plans superseded and expanded the previous policy initiatives concerning cooperation, but represented also a shift in focus to a regulative and centralised strategy, including new health legislation, structural reforms and use of economic incentives that are now about to be implemented. Discussion: The article analyses the perspectives and proposals of the previous and the recent reform initiatives in Norway and discusses them in relation to integrated care measures implemented in Denmark and Sweden.

https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2621328