Skip to main content

A Qualitative Study Examining the Unintended Consequences from Implementing a Case Management Team to Reduce Avoidable Hospital Readmission in Singapore.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Surendran, S; So, S; Lim, TW; Matchar, DB
Published in: Health Serv Insights
2025

BACKGROUND: Countries are implementing interventions to reduce avoidable hospital readmissions. However, evaluating such interventions are potentially complex. These interventions can cause unintended consequences, and they are among the most common causes of the intervention's failure. The objective of this study was to identify the unintended consequences from implementing a pilot case management team to reduce avoidable hospital readmissions at a tertiary hospital in Singapore. METHODS: We conducted five in-depth semi-structured interviews with stakeholders who were involved in the planning, development, and implementation of the intervention in addition to analysing 12 intervention documents. Deductive thematic analysis using Rogers' diffusion of innovation theory was conducted. RESULTS: Data analysis generated seven subthemes: ineffective targeting of patient population, fund constraints, lack of patient ownership, limited post discharge follow up, comprehensive care approaches, role overlap and patient confusion. The absence of a readmission risk assessment tool resulted in care plan needs assessments being conducted for all admitted patients, rather than targeting those who would benefit most. This broad approach overwhelmed care coordination efforts. The initial plan to form a specialised intervention team responsible for care plan needs assessments could not be fully established due to funding constraints. As a result, the intervention team functioned more as a consulting service, providing recommendations to the primary team, which retained decision-making authority. Overlapping roles with existing case managers caused patient confusion, prompting the intervention team to step back and support care plan needs assessment remotely. CONCLUSION: Overall, results suggest that intervention team recognised a problem and participated in the intervention. This became the foundation for implementing change. However, the unintended consequences undermined the intervention from achieving its objectives and as a result the intervention was stopped. Decision-makers should pay attention to these unintended consequences to inform effective implementation and refine future interventions.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Health Serv Insights

DOI

ISSN

1178-6329

Publication Date

2025

Volume

18

Start / End Page

11786329251337533

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Surendran, S., So, S., Lim, T. W., & Matchar, D. B. (2025). A Qualitative Study Examining the Unintended Consequences from Implementing a Case Management Team to Reduce Avoidable Hospital Readmission in Singapore. Health Serv Insights, 18, 11786329251337532. https://doi.org/10.1177/11786329251337533
Surendran, Shilpa, Stephen So, Toon Wei Lim, and David Bruce Matchar. “A Qualitative Study Examining the Unintended Consequences from Implementing a Case Management Team to Reduce Avoidable Hospital Readmission in Singapore.Health Serv Insights 18 (2025): 11786329251337532. https://doi.org/10.1177/11786329251337533.
Surendran, Shilpa, et al. “A Qualitative Study Examining the Unintended Consequences from Implementing a Case Management Team to Reduce Avoidable Hospital Readmission in Singapore.Health Serv Insights, vol. 18, 2025, p. 11786329251337532. Pubmed, doi:10.1177/11786329251337533.

Published In

Health Serv Insights

DOI

ISSN

1178-6329

Publication Date

2025

Volume

18

Start / End Page

11786329251337533

Location

United States