Service user and clinician relationships |
Barriers: lack of trust in clinicians who are perceived as uncaring, poor relationships |
Can DC foster relationships between service users and clinicians? |
Facilitators: trust in and rapport with clinicians, family involvement |
(Dimitropoulos et al., 2015; Hovish et al., 2012; Lindgren et al., 2013; McLaren et al., 2013; Reale et al., 2015) |
Information sharing |
Barriers: lack of adequate information prior to and post transition, poor communication |
Can DC enhance effective information sharing through developmentally appropriate formats? |
Facilitators: information sharing through age-appropriate formats |
(Dunn, 2017; Hovish et al., 2012; Lindgren et al., 2013; Reale et al., 2015; Riosa et al., 2015; Singh et al., 2010) |
Being listened to |
Barriers: young people feeling their voices are not heard, a reluctance to express themselves |
Can DC enhance perceptions of a clinician's ability to listen and offer care tailored to individuals? |
Facilitators: clinicians who listen and offer personalised services |
(Dunn, 2017; Hovish et al., 2012; Riosa et al., 2015) |
Service accessibility |
Barriers: lack of suitable appointments, poor geographical accessibility and non-developmental service models |
Can DC improve accessibility to services and appointment availability? |
Facilitators: easily contactable, flexible and accessible services with continuity of care |
(Hovish et al., 2012; Paul et al., 2015; Reale et al., 2015; Singh et al., 2010; Swift et al., 2013) |
Autonomy |
Barriers: failure to foster personal responsibility |
Can DC encourage autonomy and personal responsibility? |
Facilitators: promoting autonomy, responsibility, motivation for self-management and shared-care goals |
(Dunn, 2017; Lindgren et al., 2013; Swift et al., 2013) |