Barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in England: a senior stakeholder interview study

Introduction: Integrated care systems (ICSs) are the latest major innovation aiming to develop localised, integrated health and social care services to improve population health in England. Nationally, alcohol has received limited attention in National Health Service (NHS) strategic decision-makin...

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Main Authors: Madden, Mary, Stewart, Duncan, McCambridge, Jim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9552/1/e000829.full.pdf
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author Madden, Mary
Stewart, Duncan
McCambridge, Jim
author_facet Madden, Mary
Stewart, Duncan
McCambridge, Jim
author_sort Madden, Mary
collection LMU
description Introduction: Integrated care systems (ICSs) are the latest major innovation aiming to develop localised, integrated health and social care services to improve population health in England. Nationally, alcohol has received limited attention in National Health Service (NHS) strategic decision-making relative to its burden of harm, which varies considerably in localities. We examined decision-making and progress on alcohol in two contrasting ICSs, identifying systemic barriers to dealing with alcohol harm and potential leverage points, particularly in primary care. Methods: Qualitative case study in two ICSs differing in strategic prioritisation of alcohol in Northern England. In-depth semistructured interviews with 14 senior stakeholders followed by constructionist thematic analysis. Results: ICS formation occurred when services had been under sustained pressures with lines of communication and accountability emergent and unclear. Stakeholders identified fundamental disconnects between prevention and treatment. ICS strategic prioritisation of alcohol engendered new perspectives and novel actions. Even where not prioritised, there was a demand for placing alcohol work within a population frame. Attention to alcohol was somewhat precarious in primary care and overlooked in NHS health inequalities discourse. Reframing alcohol clinically as a drug was seen as having unrealised potential to prevent or delay disease onset and complications and improve NHS effectiveness. While congruent with the vision of how the new system should be working, there were doubts about capacity in current circumstances. Conclusions: There is much to do to create a joined-up, system-wide approach to alcohol, and thus a strong case for a national NHS alcohol strategy to guide ICS decision-making, addressing links between NHS work and public health.
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spelling oai:repository.londonmet.ac.uk:95522024-08-21T15:42:49Z https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9552/ Barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in England: a senior stakeholder interview study Madden, Mary Stewart, Duncan McCambridge, Jim 360 Social problems & services; associations 610 Medicine & health Introduction: Integrated care systems (ICSs) are the latest major innovation aiming to develop localised, integrated health and social care services to improve population health in England. Nationally, alcohol has received limited attention in National Health Service (NHS) strategic decision-making relative to its burden of harm, which varies considerably in localities. We examined decision-making and progress on alcohol in two contrasting ICSs, identifying systemic barriers to dealing with alcohol harm and potential leverage points, particularly in primary care. Methods: Qualitative case study in two ICSs differing in strategic prioritisation of alcohol in Northern England. In-depth semistructured interviews with 14 senior stakeholders followed by constructionist thematic analysis. Results: ICS formation occurred when services had been under sustained pressures with lines of communication and accountability emergent and unclear. Stakeholders identified fundamental disconnects between prevention and treatment. ICS strategic prioritisation of alcohol engendered new perspectives and novel actions. Even where not prioritised, there was a demand for placing alcohol work within a population frame. Attention to alcohol was somewhat precarious in primary care and overlooked in NHS health inequalities discourse. Reframing alcohol clinically as a drug was seen as having unrealised potential to prevent or delay disease onset and complications and improve NHS effectiveness. While congruent with the vision of how the new system should be working, there were doubts about capacity in current circumstances. Conclusions: There is much to do to create a joined-up, system-wide approach to alcohol, and thus a strong case for a national NHS alcohol strategy to guide ICS decision-making, addressing links between NHS work and public health. BMJ Publishing Group 2024-07-31 Article PeerReviewed text en cc_by_4 https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9552/1/e000829.full.pdf Madden, Mary, Stewart, Duncan and McCambridge, Jim (2024) Barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in England: a senior stakeholder interview study. BMJ Public Health, 2(1) (e00082). pp. 1-7. ISSN 2753-4294 https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/2/1/e000829 10.1136/bmjph-2023-000829 10.1136/bmjph-2023-000829
spellingShingle 360 Social problems & services; associations
610 Medicine & health
Madden, Mary
Stewart, Duncan
McCambridge, Jim
Barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in England: a senior stakeholder interview study
title Barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in England: a senior stakeholder interview study
title_full Barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in England: a senior stakeholder interview study
title_fullStr Barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in England: a senior stakeholder interview study
title_full_unstemmed Barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in England: a senior stakeholder interview study
title_short Barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in England: a senior stakeholder interview study
title_sort barriers and leverage points for seeing alcohol differently in integrated care systems in england a senior stakeholder interview study
topic 360 Social problems & services; associations
610 Medicine & health
url https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9552/1/e000829.full.pdf
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