University of Leicester
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New horizons in systems engineering and thinking to improve health and social care for older people

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-12-03, 14:31 authored by Navneet Aujla, Tricia Tooman, Stella Arakelyan, Tim Kerby, Louise Hartley, Amy O’Donnell, Bruce Guthrie, Ian Underwood, Julie A Jacko, Atul Anand

Existing models for the safe, timely and effective delivery of health and social care are challenged by an ageing population. Services and care pathways are often optimised for single-disease management, while many older people are presenting with multiple long-term conditions and frailty. Systems engineering describes a holistic, interdisciplinary approach to change that is focused on people, system understanding, design and risk management. These principles are the basis of many established quality improvement (QI) tools in health and social care, but implementation has often been limited to single services or condition areas. Newer engineering techniques may help reshape more complex systems. Systems thinking is an essential component of this mindset to understand the underlying relationships and characteristics of a working system. It promotes the use of tools that map, measure and interrogate the dynamics of complex systems. In this New Horizons piece, we describe the evolution of systems approaches while noting the challenges of small-scale QI efforts that fail to address whole-system problems. The opportunities for novel soft-systems approaches are described, along with a recent update to the Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety model, which includes human-centred design. Systems modelling and simulation techniques harness routine data to understand the functioning of complex health and social care systems. These tools could support better-informed system change by allowing comparison of simulated approaches before implementation, but better effectiveness evidence is required. Modern systems engineering and systems thinking techniques have potential to inform the redesign of services appropriate for the complex needs of older people.

Funding

Systems Engineering and Thinking To Transform Transitions (SET4) in health and care for people with multiple long-term conditions

National Institute for Health Research

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History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Psychology & Vision Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Age and Ageing

Volume

53

Issue

10

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

0002-0729

eissn

1468-2834

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-12-03

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Miss Navneet Aujla

Deposit date

2024-11-07