A Qualitative Theoretical Framework for Integrating Laboratory, Cardiovascular, Biomedical, Nursing, Pharmacy, and Family Medicine Roles in Contemporary Healthcare Systems
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.66838/J.Carcinog.24.8s.1183-1199Keywords:
Qualitative theoretical framework, integrated healthcare, interdisciplinary collaboration, laboratory medicine, cardiovascular medicine, biomedical sciences, nursing, pharmacy, family medicine, patient-centered care.Abstract
Contemporary healthcare systems are increasingly challenged by population aging, the rising prevalence of chronic diseases, rapid technological advancements, and the growing demand for coordinated multidisciplinary care. These challenges have exposed the limitations of fragmented healthcare delivery and highlighted the need for effective collaboration among healthcare professionals. Therefore, this study aimed to develop a qualitative theoretical framework for integrating the roles of Laboratory Medicine, Cardiovascular Medicine, Biomedical Sciences, Nursing, Pharmacy, and Family Medicine within contemporary healthcare systems.
A qualitative theory development design was adopted using a comprehensive literature-based approach. Peer-reviewed articles, systematic reviews, international reports, and conceptual publications were critically analyzed to identify common themes and collaborative mechanisms that support interdisciplinary healthcare practice. The findings were synthesized through qualitative thematic analysis to construct an integrated conceptual framework.
The results revealed that successful healthcare integration depends on five essential components: patient-centered care, interprofessional collaboration, effective communication, evidence-based practice, organizational leadership, and shared clinical decision-making. The proposed framework demonstrates that each healthcare discipline contributes specialized expertise while working collaboratively to improve diagnostic accuracy, medication safety, continuity of care, healthcare quality, and patient outcomes. The framework also emphasizes that effective interdisciplinary communication reduces fragmentation and strengthens coordinated healthcare delivery across different clinical settings.
In conclusion, the proposed framework provides a comprehensive conceptual model that supports interdisciplinary collaboration and may guide healthcare professionals, educators, researchers, administrators, and policymakers in improving healthcare quality and developing integrated, sustainable, and patient-centered healthcare systems. Future studies are recommended to validate and apply the framework in different healthcare settings.




