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Researchers aim to create better coherence and reassurance for patients

Lagt online: 18.06.2026

For patients, transitions between hospital, municipality, and general practice can be vulnerable. A new research project at Aalborg University will explore how existing systems, data, and workflows can strengthen cross-sector collaboration in the health system and make care pathways more coherent.

Nyhed

Researchers aim to create better coherence and reassurance for patients

Lagt online: 18.06.2026

For patients, transitions between hospital, municipality, and general practice can be vulnerable. A new research project at Aalborg University will explore how existing systems, data, and workflows can strengthen cross-sector collaboration in the health system and make care pathways more coherent.

By Susanne Togeby, AAU Kommunikation og Public Affairs
Photo: Colourbox

As a patient in the Danish health system, you may experience being referred onwards without knowing who takes over, and whether the next professionals in the care pathway have the necessary information. This can create uncertainty and risk that patients do not receive the right care. For healthcare professionals, it may lead to duplication of work when patient data is not available or not clearly integrated into relevant workflows.

This is explained by Associate Professor Wendy Gunn, who leads a new project titled TRANSIT. The aim of the project is to create greater coherence and reassurance for patients when multiple parts of the health system are involved in their care.

“Transitions between hospital, municipality, and general practice are often a challenge. This can lead to misunderstandings, duplication of work, and uncertainty for patients, relatives, and healthcare professionals,” says Wendy Gunn.

Transitions between hospital, municipality, and general practice are often a challenge.

Wendy Gunn

Associate Professor at the Department of Sustainability and Planning

One possible population of interest is patients with heart failure, where transitions between hospital, general practice, municipal care, and relatives are particularly critical.

In current practice, relevant information may be distributed across different systems, responsibilities may be unclear, and professionals may not always have the same understanding of what needs to happen next. Poor coordination may contribute to avoidable readmissions, unclear responsibilities, and reduced quality of care at home.

The project will explore where coordination between hospital, municipality, and general practice breaks down, what information needs to follow patients across sectors, and where closer coordination is needed. The goal is to identify solutions that strengthen coherence in care pathways without increasing documentation burden and administrative work for healthcare professionals.

Wendy Gunn emphasizes that the project does not aim to develop a standalone IT system. Instead, the seed phase examines how existing systems, workflows, responsibilities, and data practices can be better aligned to support coherent care transitions.

About the TRANSIT project

Title: Making Care Transitions Work: Cross-Sector Coordination and Adoption at Scale (TRANSIT)

Anchoring: The project is anchored in AAU’s Health Mission

Funding: DKK 120,000 via AAU Health Mission seed funding

Project leadership: The project is led by Associate Professor Wendy Gunn, AAU Copenhagen, as PI, with Associate Professor Mette Ebbesen, AAU Aalborg, as co-PI. Both researchers are part of AAU Re-TECH – Responsible Technology Futures, Department of Sustainability and Planning.

Project partners:

  • PRIMA / Center for General Practice (CAM), Department of Health Science and Technology, AAU
  • Copenhagen Health Innovation (CHI)

 

See also: