@article { author = {Smeets, Miek and Baldewijns, Karolien and Vaes, Bert and Vandenhoudt, Hilde}, title = {Integration of Chronic Care in a Fragmented Healthcare System; Comment on “Integration or Fragmentation of Health Care? Examining Policies and Politics in a Belgian Case Study”}, journal = {International Journal of Health Policy and Management}, volume = {12}, number = {Issue 1}, pages = {1-3}, year = {2023}, publisher = {Kerman University of Medical Sciences}, issn = {2322-5939}, eissn = {2322-5939}, doi = {10.34172/ijhpm.2022.7143}, abstract = {The authors of “Integration or Fragmentation of Health Care? Examining Policies and Politics in a Belgian Case Study” present a fresh perspective on the inertia of integrated care (IC) implementation. They conclude that the decisive power in Belgium is fragmented and undermines efforts towards IC. As researchers in integrated heart failure (HF) care and active primary healthcare professionals, we comment on the three policy initiatives evaluated by Martens et al from a bottom-up perspective. A Learning Healthcare Network (LHCN) was established September 2019 to overcome fragmentation, the lack of evaluation and capacity loss each time a pilot project ends. This commentary wishes to illustrate that a LHCN can be a powerful meso-level mechanism to engage in alignment work and to overcome macro-level barriers that are often difficult to change and not supportive of IC}, keywords = {Integrated Care,Chronic Care,Learning Healthcare Network,Macro-Level Barriers,Belgium,Health Policy Reform}, url = {https://www.ijhpm.com/article_4292.html}, eprint = {https://www.ijhpm.com/article_4292_5c34b91092f3f2fd72405e1912d666b1.pdf} }