Journal Article10.1377/HLTHAFF.2012.1133
Patient And Family Engagement: A Framework For Understanding The Elements And Developing Interventions And Policies
Kristin L. Carman,Pam Dardess,Maureen Maurer,Shoshanna Sofaer,Karen Adams,Christine Bechtel,Jennifer Sweeney +6 more
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TL;DR: The levels at which patient engagement can occur across the health care system are discussed, from the direct care setting to incorporating patient engagement into organizational design, governance, and policy making.
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Abstract: Patient and family engagement offers a promising pathway toward better-quality health care, more-efficient care, and improved population health. Since definitions of patient engagement and conceptions of how it works vary, we propose a framework. We first present the forms engagement can take, ranging from consultation to partnership. We discuss the levels at which patient engagement can occur across the health care system, from the direct care setting to incorporating patient engagement into organizational design, governance, and policy making. We also discuss the factors that influence whether and to what extent engagement occurs. We explore the implications of our multidimensional framework for the development of interventions and policies that support patient and family engagement, and we offer a research agenda to investigate how such engagement leads to improved outcomes.
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Citations
SEIPS 2.0: A human factors framework for studying and improving the work of healthcare professionals and patients
Richard J. Holden,Pascale Carayon,Ayse P. Gurses,Peter Hoonakker,Ann Schoofs Hundt,A. Ant Ozok,A. Joy Rivera-Rodriguez +6 more
TL;DR: An extended model of the SEIPS, SEIPS 2.0 is a new human factors/ergonomics framework for studying and improving health and healthcare that describes how sociotechnical systems shape health-related work done by professionals and non-professionals, independently and collaboratively.
Engaging patients to improve quality of care: a systematic review
Yvonne Bombard,Yvonne Bombard,G. Ross Baker,Elaina Orlando,Elaina Orlando,Carol Fancott,Pooja Bhatia,Selina Casalino,Kanecy Onate,Jean-Louis Denis,Marie-Pascale Pomey +10 more
TL;DR: Patient engagement can inform patient and provider education and policies, as well as enhance service delivery and governance.
Coproduction of healthcare service
Maren Batalden,Paul B. Batalden,Peter A. Margolis,Michael Seid,Gail Armstrong,Lisa Opipari-Arrigan,Hans Hartung +6 more
TL;DR: The coproduction principle is used to examine the roles, relationships and aims of this interdependent work, and the principle's implications and challenges for health professional development, for service delivery system design and for understanding and measuring benefit in healthcare services.
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From tokenism to empowerment: progressing patient and public involvement in healthcare improvement
Josephine Ocloo,Rachel Matthews +1 more
TL;DR: Current models of PPI are too narrow, and few organisations mention empowerment or address equality and diversity in their involvement strategies, and these aspects of involvement should receive greater attention.
819
Evaluating patient and stakeholder engagement in research: moving from theory to practice
TL;DR: This assessment provides explicit guidance for better alignment of engagement's promised benefits with evaluation efforts and identifies specific areas for development of evaluative measures and better reporting processes.
429
References
Effectiveness of strategies for informing, educating, and involving patients
Angela Coulter,Jo Ellins +1 more
TL;DR: C Coulter and Ellins as mentioned in this paper argue that any strategy to reduce health inequalities must promote health literacy and evidence that strategies to strengthen patient engagement are effective is substantial, argue Angela Coulter and Jo Ellins.
Through the Patient's Eyes: Understanding and Promoting Patient-Centered Care
Richard E. Peschel,Enid Peschel +1 more
TL;DR: Through the Patient's Eyes: Understanding and Promoting Patient-Centered Care is left with the impression that even if all of the issues listed above were successfully resolved and implemented, the authors would still be left with a health care system that many patients would find frustrating, confusing, and impersonal.
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Patient engagement--what works?
TL;DR: The evidence in support of the most promising interventions designed to help patients play an effective role in their own health care is outlined.
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Patient centeredness in medical encounters requiring an interpreter.
TL;DR: Spanish-speaking patients are at a double disadvantage in encounters with English-speaking physicians: these patients make fewer comments, and the ones they do make are more likely to be ignored, which may result in lower adherence rates and poorer medical outcomes among Spanish- speaking patients.
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Family-centered Multidisciplinary Rounds Enhance the Team Approach in Pediatrics
TL;DR: Family-centered multidisciplinary rounds is a method of conducting inpatient hospital rounds that fosters teamwork and empowers hospital staff and its impact on staff satisfaction and the family's ability to participate in their care is significant.
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