Reflections from an Integrated Care Manager: The Power of Relationship-Building in Driving Meaningful Change
By: Matt Ward, Integrated Care Manager
When I reflect on the work I’ve been doing within a number of Ontario Health Teams (OHTs) over the past few years, one theme consistently stands out: relationships with clinicians are the strongest lever for unburdening and enabling change.
Across different digital health initiatives, it has become clear that meaningful transformation in healthcare doesn’t start with systems or tools: it starts with trust, collaboration, and shared understanding of the realities clinicians face every day.
Supporting primary care attachment through workflow alignment
A large part of my focus has been on primary care attachment and the operational work that supports it. While the term “attachment” can sound administrative, at its core it’s about ensuring people are meaningfully connected to primary care clinicians who can support their ongoing health needs.
Much of my role has involved working closely with clinicians and care teams to understand workflows, identify barriers, and help design processes that make it easier for patients to be connected to the right care at the right time. A key part of this work has also involved practice facilitation. This is where we sit down with teams to look closely at their current processes and rosters, helping them build confidence in their systems so they can safely and effectively expand access to more patients.
What I’ve found is that the success of this work isn’t just about the actual systems or lists: it’s about collaboration and trust. Acting as a conduit between teams, I’ve spent a lot of time working alongside physicians and clinic staff to understand their day-to-day realities. When workflows are aligned with how clinicians actually practice, it becomes much easier to support improvements that ultimately benefit patients, whether that’s faster access, smoother navigation, or more consistent follow-up care.
Remote care monitoring: supporting patients where they are
Another area I’ve been deeply involved in is remote care monitoring, particularly within palliative care. Building on a model initially developed in the Grey Bruce region, we’ve been able to adapt and implement this approach across the OHTs I support.
At its heart, this work is about supporting patients where they are, often in their homes where they want to be, while ensuring they remain closely connected to their care teams. The impact of this has been significant. By proactively monitoring patients and integrating care pathways with navigation supports and community partners, we’ve seen meaningful reductions in unnecessary emergency department visits and hospital escalations. More importantly, patients and families experience a greater sense of continuity and reassurance, knowing that support is accessible without needing to navigate acute care settings unless truly required.
What makes this particularly powerful is the collaboration across the system. By linking remote monitoring with care navigators and community-based supports, we are helping to create a more coordinated, responsive model of care, especially for patients with complex needs. It’s a strong example of how digital health-enabled care models can improve both experience and outcomes when they are designed with patients at the centre.
The goal is never technology for technology’s sake. Instead, it is about ensuring that digital tools and care models fit seamlessly into clinical practice and directly support patient care, whether that involves better coordination between clinicians, enabling virtual and remote care models, or improving access pathways for patients.
Why relationships remain the foundation of transformation
Across all of this work, one of the most important lessons I’ve learned is the value of relationships. In healthcare transformation, we often focus heavily on tools, processes, and technology – and while these are essential, they only create impact when they are grounded in trust.
Taking the time to build genuine relationships with clinicians and care teams changes the nature of the work itself. It shapes how challenges are surfaced, how solutions are co-designed, and how change is ultimately received in practice. When there is trust, conversations become easier, problem-solving becomes shared, and the introduction of new processes or digital tools feels like a collective effort rather than an external change being introduced.
The work across OHTs is about building a more integrated system where patients experience care as connected, coordinated, and responsive to their needs rather than fragmented across services. Being part of that transformation, and helping bridge clinical practice, digital health, and system design, is both a privilege and a responsibility I take seriously. What continues to motivate me most is seeing the real-world impact: patients supported earlier, cared for more safely in the community, and better connected to the services they need. And that impact is rarely driven by any single tool or initiative – it comes from people working together over time with a shared commitment to doing what’s right for patients.
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