A qualitative study on how social workers from regional and metropolitan Queensland, Australia perceive the impact of the national prioritisation system on hospital discharge planning_A study protocol.pdf (362.81 kB)
A qualitative study on how social workers from regional and metropolitan Queensland, Australia perceive the impact of the national prioritisation system on hospital discharge planning: A study protocol
journal contribution
posted on 2022-07-11, 23:33 authored by Bernadette DimlaBernadette Dimla, Denise WoodDenise Wood, Lynne ParkinsonIn 2012, the Australian Commonwealth Government introduced a series of reforms for the aged care sector including the implementation of the National Prioritisation System for a flexible, accessible and demand-driven approach to home care services for older people. Nevertheless, an increasing number of older people continue to wait for months to be assigned home care packages on the national prioritisation queue, a component of the National Prioritisation System. There is limited evidence on the impact of the national prioritisation queue on discharge planning practices of social workers in supporting older people returning home from hospital admission. The aim of the research described in this paper is to explore the perceptions of social workers from rural and urban health services areas on how the introduction of the national prioritisation queue has influenced discharge planning of older people who are still waiting assignment of home care packages. This study protocol establishes the need for this qualitative study and provides an overview of the theoretical framework underpinning the research; discusses and describes the methods for sampling/recruitment and data collection, the approach to be utilised for qualitative analysis and the planned dissemination strategy. Understanding how social workers respond to the perceived challenges to discharge planning posed by the national prioritisation queue and the implications arising from the research have the potential to inform the development of best practice approaches and further enhance social work response to identified issues.
History
Volume
19Start Page
1End Page
8Number of Pages
8eISSN
1609-4069ISSN
1609-4069Publisher
SagePublisher DOI
Additional Rights
CC BY-NC 4.0Language
enPeer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- Yes
Acceptance Date
2020-10-20External Author Affiliations
University of NewcastleAuthor Research Institute
- Centre for Research in Equity and Advancement of Teaching & Education (CREATE)
Era Eligible
- Yes