Healthcare Business Review
About Us Conference Advertise With Us
  • APAC
    • US
    • EUROPE
    • APAC
    • CANADA
    • LATAM
  • Patient Care
    Medical Transportation
    Plastic Surgery
    Regenerative Medicine
    Therapy Services 
  • Operations
    Business Process Outsourcing
    Consulting Service
    Financial Services
    healthcare Insurance
    Healthcare Marketing
    Healthcare Outsourcing
    Healthcare Staffing
    Medical Billing
    Medical Staff Training and Development
    Nurse Staffing
  • Healthcare Services
    Compliance & Risk Management
    Facility Management Services
    Healthcare Education
    Healthcare Procurement
  • Leadership Perspectives
  • Insights
  • News
  • Magazines
  • CXO Awards
×
#

Healthcare Business Review Weekly Brief

Be first to read the latest tech news, Industry Leader's Insights, and CIO interviews of medium and large enterprises exclusively from Healthcare Business Review

Subscribe

loading

Thank you for Subscribing to Healthcare Business Review Weekly Brief

  • Home
  • News

Workforce Pressures Could Shape How Multidisciplinary Care Is Delivered

By

Healthcare Business Review | Thursday, July 02, 2026

Finding the right mix of expertise has always been part of running a multidisciplinary chronic pain and injury clinic. The model depends on bringing together professionals whose roles may overlap at certain points while remaining distinct in others.


That sounds manageable in theory. In practice, scheduling alone can become complicated when several providers contribute to the same patient journey.

Stay ahead of the industry with exclusive feature stories on the top companies, expert insights and the latest news delivered straight to your inbox. Subscribe today.


Chronic pain cases often develop over long periods. Patients may arrive with extensive medical histories, previous treatments and questions that do not fit neatly into a single appointment. The work requires time and attention. It also requires professionals who are comfortable operating within a shared care environment.


The challenge is not just finding people to fill open roles. Clinics need providers who bring real expertise to the table, but who can also work inside a larger treatment plan. One clinician may be focused on a specific part of recovery, but their decisions often depend on what others are seeing elsewhere in the patient’s care.


That changes what workforce strength looks like. Clinical skill still matters, but it is not enough on its own. Providers also need to communicate clearly, understand the wider case picture and recognize how their recommendations sit alongside the judgment of other professionals involved in the same patient’s treatment.


Hiring, then, is only part of the issue. Keeping staff matters just as much. When patients stay in treatment over longer periods, continuity can shape how well their cases are managed. Frequent turnover adds more handoffs, more adjustment and more time spent getting new providers up to speed.


Knowledge transfer can become another consideration. Experienced practitioners often develop an understanding of recurring case patterns through years of practice. Some of that knowledge appears in documentation. Some of it comes from direct experience with patients, referral sources and clinical workflows.


Multidisciplinary clinics are not the only healthcare settings dealing with these pressures. Staffing challenges are being felt across the system. But clinics built around collaboration can feel those changes more sharply because care often depends on several professionals working through the same treatment plan.


Patients do not usually see that in terms of staffing structures. They feel it in more practical ways: how soon they can get an appointment, whether the same people remain involved in their care and whether important details carry over from one visit to the next.


For multidisciplinary pain clinics in Canada, workforce issues are unlikely to move into the background anytime soon. Conversations about care models often focus on treatment methods, but those models only work if there are enough trained people available to deliver them consistently.


More in News

The Growing Impact of Mobile Phlebotomy on Healthcare Delivery

Mobile phlebotomy services are expanding as healthcare systems focus on convenience, accessibility, and patient-centered diagnostics. Its shift reflects a broader trend in healthcare delivery, where services are brought closer to patients rather than requiring them to travel. The growing demand for chronic disease monitoring, preventive testing, and post-discharge care has made mobile phlebotomy an essential part of modern diagnostic processes. Why Is Mobile Phlebotomy Demand Rising Across Care Settings? Rising demand for mobile phlebotomy stems largely from changing patient expectations and care models. Patients increasingly value services that fit into daily routines, especially those managing chronic conditions requiring frequent testing. Home-based blood collection eliminates travel stress and waiting times, making routine diagnostics more manageable. Healthcare providers also benefit from this approach. Mobile phlebotomy supports hospital-at-home programs, post-surgical follow-ups, and remote patient monitoring initiatives. Compass Health Consultants helps healthcare providers optimize these programs by streamlining sample collection and integrating digital tools to ensure better patient tracking. Reliable sample collection outside traditional facilities helps clinicians track patient progress without unnecessary readmissions or clinic visits. This flexibility strengthens care coordination and improves outcomes. Aging populations further accelerate adoption. Older adults often require regular laboratory testing, but may face challenges visiting diagnostic centers. Mobile services provide a safer and more comfortable alternative, particularly for individuals with limited mobility or compromised immunity. Long-term care facilities also rely on mobile phlebotomy to reduce disruptions and maintain infection control standards. Employer-sponsored health programs contribute to demand growth as well. Workplace testing initiatives use mobile phlebotomy to support wellness screenings, occupational health compliance, and preventive care. These services minimize productivity loss while expanding access to essential Statewise specializes in developing AI-driven healthcare technologies that enhance mobile phlebotomy workflows, improving accuracy and efficiency in patient diagnostics.diagnostics. How are technology and workforce models transforming service delivery? Technology plays a central role in improving mobile phlebotomy efficiency and reliability. Digital scheduling platforms allow patients, providers, and laboratories to coordinate appointments seamlessly. Automated reminders and real-time updates reduce no-shows and optimize route planning for phlebotomists. Electronic health record integration strengthens data accuracy and turnaround times. Secure digital transmission of orders and results reduces administrative burden and supports faster clinical decision-making. These tools also enhance traceability, ensuring proper sample handling from collection to laboratory processing. Workforce strategies evolve alongside technology. Mobile phlebotomy providers invest in specialized training focused on patient communication, home-based safety protocols, and diverse collection environments. Skilled phlebotomists adapt techniques to accommodate varying conditions while maintaining sample integrity and patient comfort. Quality assurance remains a priority as services scale. Standardized procedures, temperature-controlled transport, and compliance monitoring ensure diagnostic accuracy regardless of collection location. Providers emphasize consistency to maintain trust among laboratories, clinicians, and patients.   ...Read more

Referral Coordination Remains a Practical Question for Multidisciplinary Pain Clinics

A person living with chronic pain rarely interacts with a single healthcare professional. The path often moves between physicians, rehabilitation providers and other specialists over an extended period. That reality helps explain why multidisciplinary chronic pain and injury clinics continue to attract attention across Canada. The concept is straightforward. Patients living with ongoing pain often need support from more than one part of the care team. They may be working through physical rehabilitation while also being assessed by a physician. What happens in one part of their care can affect the decisions being made in another. When those conversations happen in separate places, updates can take longer to reach the right people, and important details can be lost along the way. This is one reason referral coordination remains a recurring discussion around multidisciplinary clinics. The value is not limited to the services offered. It also relates to how information travels between people involved in the patient's care. Complex cases rarely end with the clinical appointment. Once the assessment is done, another layer of work begins. Reports have to be read properly, recommendations need to reach the people who can act on them, and every follow-up adds another set of notes, updates and records. That work does not treat the pain itself, but it often decides whether the next step in care moves cleanly or gets held up. This is one reason multidisciplinary clinics matter. They do not make difficult cases simple. Doctors may still disagree, and judgment will still depend on the patient in front of them. But when different specialists are working closer together, the conversation is easier to keep in one place instead of being scattered across separate offices, referrals and delays. For insurers, employers and legal stakeholders connected to injury cases, communication can become almost as important as treatment itself. Questions about recovery status, functional limitations and future care plans often depend on information coming from several sources. The more people involved, the greater the need for consistent documentation. That creates an administrative consideration that extends beyond patient care. Clinics are not only managing appointments and assessments. They are also managing information flow among parties who may be relying on the same case file for different purposes. The difficulty is that better coordination is not effortless. Once more people are involved in a case, there is often more to check, discuss and agree on before anything moves forward. That can improve the quality of the decision, but it can also slow the pace of care. Clinics have to find a way to get the benefit of shared judgment without turning every step into another hold-up. Interest in multidisciplinary care is unlikely to rest solely on treatment philosophy. Day-to-day coordination remains part of the conversation. How clinics handle communication, documentation and case management may continue to shape perceptions of their effectiveness just as much as the clinical services themselves. ...Read more

Expectations Around Recovery Can Be Difficult to Manage in Chronic Pain Care

One of the less discussed aspects of chronic pain treatment involves expectations. Patients often arrive at a clinic hoping for clear answers after spending months or even years searching for relief. Multidisciplinary care can broaden the range of expertise available, but it does not necessarily make recovery straightforward. This creates a communication challenge for clinics. Pain is rarely experienced in the same way by every patient. Two individuals with similar injuries may describe very different outcomes. Progress can be uneven. Treatment plans may change over time as new information becomes available. That uncertainty is present from the first appointment. Patients want to know what improvement might look like, how long it could take and whether the treatment is likely to help. Clinics have to answer those questions carefully. They need to offer enough reassurance to keep patients engaged, without making recovery sound more predictable than it really is. The conversation becomes more complicated in injury-related cases where employers, insurers or legal representatives are also involved. Each party may be looking at the same case through a different lens. One may be focused on whether the patient can return to work. Another may be tracking treatment progress. A third may need clear documentation to support a claim or decision. Multidisciplinary clinics are often caught in the middle of these expectations. A patient’s care may involve several professionals, and that broader perspective can be useful when everyone understands the same goals. Problems arise when expectations move faster than the patient’s actual clinical progress. Much of this comes down to communication. Formal reports matter, but so do the smaller conversations that happen during appointments. A treatment plan can be clinically sound, yet still leave a patient unsure if no one has clearly explained what to expect, what may change slowly and why the plan is being adjusted. That is especially important in chronic pain care, where improvement is rarely tied to one clear endpoint. Progress may come gradually. It may show up in better movement, higher activity levels or small changes in daily life rather than a complete resolution of pain. For clinics, this makes patient engagement a central part of care. When patients understand why a recommendation has been made, they are more likely to stay with the treatment plan. When they are confused, uncertain or expecting faster results, participation can weaken even when the clinical reasoning is still sound. Multidisciplinary clinics are often evaluated through the lens of treatment options and specialist access. Those factors matter, but they are only part of the story. Managing expectations, explaining progress and maintaining trust throughout a long treatment journey remain central parts of the work. Those conversations may never attract the same attention as clinical interventions, yet they often shape how patients experience care from beginning to end. ...Read more

Response Time Is Becoming a Management Question, Not Just a Clinical One

A patient’s condition can change quickly, but the pressure created by that change rarely stays in one room. When a hospital rapid response team is called, the event often touches several parts of the facility at once. Clinical staff have to assess the patient, nearby units may need to adjust workloads and supervisors often need visibility into what is happening in real time. That reality is drawing attention to the systems hospitals use to coordinate rapid response activity. The discussion is not limited to clinical protocols. Many healthcare facilities are spending more time examining how information moves during an escalation and whether the right people are receiving it quickly enough. Hospitals usually know how to get information moving. On an ordinary day, a nurse, doctor or coordinator often knows exactly who to call and how quickly a message needs to move. That rhythm can hold up well when the workload is steady. It becomes harder when the day turns crowded. Patient numbers rise, urgent cases overlap and teams have less room to wait for a reply or chase a missing update. A small delay that would barely stand out on a calmer shift can start to slow decisions when the hospital is already under pressure. The issue is not necessarily a lack of clinical expertise. Most facilities already have experienced personnel who understand how rapid response procedures should work. What often receives closer scrutiny is the path information follows before a team reaches the bedside and while the event is unfolding. Communication gaps can emerge in different ways. A message may reach one department immediately while another receives the update later. Staff may spend valuable time confirming whether a request has been acknowledged. Supervisors may know an event occurred but lack a clear view of its status. Hospital administrators are paying attention because these situations can affect more than emergency interventions. When communication slows during an escalation, other departments may feel the impact through staffing adjustments, patient movement decisions or scheduling changes. Communication platforms can help hospitals send alerts faster, but they do not solve every response problem. Once the system is in use, teams still need to know who should respond, when an issue should be escalated and which notification habits need to change. Faster alerts can help, but they also expose gaps in existing workflows. Hospitals frequently find themselves revisiting responsibilities and decision-making processes at the same time they are rolling out the technology. Training plays a large role in that shift. Many staff members have spent years relying on familiar ways of sharing urgent information. Moving them into a new process takes time, especially in hospital settings where decisions often have to be made quickly and under pressure. That is where rapid response technology is being tested in a more practical way. Hospitals may have the clinical teams, training and protocols in place. But in a critical moment, those strengths only matter if the right people know what is happening quickly enough to act. ...Read more
Copyright © 2026 Healthcare Business Review. All rights reserved. |  Subscribe |  Sitemap |  About us |  Newsletter |  Feedback Policy |  Editorial Policy follow on linkedin
CLOSE

Specials

I agree We use cookies on this website to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies. More info

This content is copyright protected

However, if you would like to share the information in this article, you may use the link below:

https://www.healthcarebusinessreviewapac.com/news/workforce-pressures-could-shape-how-multidisciplinary-care-is-delivered-nwid-3338.html