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Enhancing Integrated Care

Enhancing Integrated Care helps primary and community care delivery organizations strengthen integrated team-based care models, including virtual care, making access easier and easing pressure on emergency departments.

Illustration featuring three healthcare providers with speech bubbles beside their heads: one with a medical cross, one with a computer monitor and one with a house.
Topics
  • Health Equity
  • Long-term care
  • Patient safety
Audience
  • Healthcare leader

  • Community organization

  • Point of care provider

Around one in five emergency department visits happen because of limited access to primary care. Enhancing Integrated Care brings teams together to share knowledge and implement integrated care approaches that help bolster social and healthcare systems, addressing hospital overcrowding.

Meet the teams

Across the country, 40 teams from 9 provinces are part of Enhancing Integrated Care’s cohort 1.

A long-term care home is partnering with primary care providers to establish a memory clinic for clients living with dementia. Some teams are focused on improving access to care for newcomer refugees. Others are leveraging virtual care to support treatment in rural and remote communities.

Together, they are building a collaborative network of leaders who are testing new models of care, learning from one another, and showing what’s possible when care is integrated.

Map of Canada showing the number of participating teams by province and territory, with counts ranging from 2 to 16 displayed in purple circles.

How teams are supported

Both cohort 1 (July 2025) and cohort 2 (December 2025) are supported by:

  • Seed funding up to $10,000.

  • Expert coaches to help you address challenges, sustain improvements and plan for long-term success.

  • Proven tools and evidence-informed resources for implementing and measuring what works.

  • Virtual learning and networking to share knowledge, celebrate successes and drive collective progress.

  • Research support from CIHR-funded researchers for teams in the primary care sector. 

Participating teams will be supported to pursue their goals while building essential skills in equity, cultural safety, patient engagement and safety. They’ll also explore key topics like quality improvement and working in partnership with First Nations, Inuit, and Métis communities.

What is integrated care?

Integrated care is a collaborative approach where healthcare professionals from various disciplines—such as primary care providers, specialists, allied health professionals, mental health professionals, pharmacists and community and social workers—work together to provide coordinated, patient-centred care. This ensures patients receive the right care at the right time. The goal is to improve health outcomes, reduce service duplication, and lower costs by offering more efficient, coordinated care.

What types of projects do teams work on?

Enhanced Integrated Care builds on the success of recent HEC initiatives. These past projects are examples of the type of work that could be further strengthened through this offering:

“I'm excited for the support from HEC, we've been working on this project for two years with hurdles along the way. I’m also looking forward to the coaching and learning opportunities from others across the country.”

Featured content

Enhancing Integrated Care: What’s Possible When Care Works Together

The Enhancing Integrated Care program builds on the success of previous HEC initiatives helping organizations to design and deliver integrated care.

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Illustration of three healthcare providers sitting at a table with bubbles containing a medical cross, outline of a head with a heart at the top and a house below them signifying integrated team-based care.

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