Title Integrated care in the Baltic countries over a five-year period: an expert-informed cross-country analysis of progress, challenges and future directions
Authors Shuftan, Nathan ; Scarpetti, Giada ; Polin, Katherine ; Kasekamp, Kaija ; Behmane, Daiga ; Murauskienė, Liubovė ; Struckmann, Verena
DOI 10.1016/j.healthpol.2025.105526
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Is Part of Health policy.. Elsevier B.V.. 2026, vol. 166, art. no. 105526, p. [1-10].. ISSN 0168-8510. eISSN 1872-6054
Keywords [eng] Integrated care ; multimorbidity ; implementation ; coordination ; political commitment ; policy
Abstract [eng] Background In Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, the push for care integration has gained momentum, being seen as an innovative approach to allocate resources more efficiently and improve patient outcomes. Objective This study investigates the progress of integrating care in the Baltic countries from 2019 to 2024 to detail key learnings. Methods We undertook a cross-country study to better understand the progress in care integration in the Baltics with a two-round, 21-item questionnaire on the adoption of integrated care reforms in 2019 and 2024. Responses were analyzed to capture countries’ policy environments and their conduciveness to the uptake of integrated care. Country-specific experiences with implementation of care were further explored via case studies of pilot programmes. Results The pace of implementing integrating care varied. Existing barriers, workforce challenges and payment schemes have impeded integration across health and social care. Despite this, political commitment across successive governments to new and innovative service delivery and collaboration for chronic care management underscores an important prerequisite toward achieving more integrated and person-centred healthcare. The three case studies illustrate hurdles that come with shifting care settings and expanding roles for some workers. Conclusions Integrating care across providers and the social and health sectors is an incremental process that needs long-term political support to address persistent barriers. The Baltic countries’ experiences indicate challenges in bringing together stakeholders in areas such as data interoperability, new financing models and reorganization of workforce and skills mixing. Further work should advance evidence on patient-centred solutions for evolving needs.
Published Elsevier B.V
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2026
CC license CC license description