Care Planning
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Care Planning

Policy

Care plans help us maintain oversight of any healthcare needs not provided by the practice, and support continuity of care when a patient is transferred to or from different services.

A care plan is a living record, stored securely, that we review and update as needed. It can incorporate input from other clinicians, the patient's other healthcare providers, and their wider support team, family/whānau, and carers.

Issues that arise concerning care plans are discussed at team meetings, to support learning.

The practice uses the HealthOne shared care platform to record the care plan and ongoing health information, goals, tasks, and other related data.

Developing and sharing a care plan

Patients who would benefit from developing a shared care plan are identified by the clinician during consultations. This may include patients with complex/long-term health needs.

The patient's clinician is their principal coordinator of care and is the primary point of contact within the practice about the patient's care plan. If the coordinator is unavailable, responsibility is delegated to another appropriate clinician with the patient's consent.

Consider discussing with the patient

If the patient wants to proceed with a plan

Maintaining a record

Patient privacy

We take steps to protect patient information in the plan against unauthorised access and misuse. Only information relevant to the patient's condition is included.

The principal coordinator of care:

See also: Shared Electronic Health Record

Keywords: shared care, shared care plan

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Topic type Core content
Approved By: Key Contact
Topic ID: 8660

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