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Promoting patient-centered care: a qualitative study of facilitators and barriers in healthcare organizations with a reputation for improving the patient experience.

TLDR
Organizations that have succeeded in fostering patient-centered care have gone beyond mainstream frameworks for quality improvement based on clinical measurement and audit and have adopted a strategic organizational approach to patient focus.
Abstract
Objective. To investigate organizational facilitators and barriers to patient-centered care in US health care institutions renowned for improving the patient care experience. Design. A qualitative study involving interviews of senior staff and patient representatives. Semi-structured interviews focused on organizational processes, senior leadership, work environment, measurement and feedback mechanisms, patient engagement and information technology and access. Setting. Eight health care organizations across the USA with a reputation for successfully promoting patient-centered care. Participants. Forty individuals, including chief executives, quality directors, chief medical officers, administrative directors and patient committee representatives. Results. Interviewees reported that several organizational attributes and processes are key facilitators for making care more patient-centered: (i) strong, committed senior leadership, (ii) clear communication of strategic vision, (iii) active engagement of patient and families throughout the institution, (iv) sustained focus on staff satisfaction, (v) active measurement and feedback reporting of patient experiences, (vi) adequate resourcing of care delivery redesign, (vii) staff capacity building, (viii) accountability and incentives and (ix) a culture strongly supportive of change and learning. Interviewees reported that changing the organizational culture from a ‘provider-focus’ to a ‘patient-focus’ and the length of time it took to transition toward such a focus were the principal barriers against transforming delivery for patient-centered care.

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Patient empowerment, patient participation and patient-centeredness in hospital care: A concept analysis based on a literature review.

TL;DR: It can be concluded that patient empowerment is a much broader concept than just patient participation and patient-centeredness and may provide a useful framework that researchers, policy makers and health care providers can use to facilitate patient empowerment.
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Collecting data on patient experience is not enough: they must be used to improve care

TL;DR: It is argued that a national institute of “user” experience should be set up to draw the data together, determine how to interpret the results, and put them into practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of job satisfaction, work engagement, self-efficacy and agentic capacities on nurses' turnover intention and patient satisfaction

TL;DR: The importance of implementing actions to improve self-efficacy, self-regulation skill, work engagement and job satisfaction in order to reduce nurses' turnover intention and increase patient satisfaction with nursing care is highlighted.
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Systematic review of approaches to using patient experience data for quality improvement in healthcare settings

TL;DR: There is no single best way to collect or use PREM data for QI, but they do suggest some key points to consider when planning such an approach.
Journal ArticleDOI

Facilitators and barriers of implementing the chronic care model in primary care: a systematic review

TL;DR: These findings highlight the importance of assessing organizational capacity and needs prior to and during the implementation of the CCM, as well as gaining a better understanding of health care providers’ and organizational perspective.
References
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The fifth discipline - the art and practice of the learning organization

TL;DR: Senge's Fifth Discipline is a set of principles for building a "learning organization" as discussed by the authors, where people expand their capacity to create the results they truly desire, where new and expansive patterns of thinking are nutured, where collective aspiration is set free, and where people are contually learning together.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century

Alastair Baker
- 17 Nov 2001 - 
TL;DR: Analyzing health care organizations as complex systems, Crossing the Quality Chasm also documents the causes of the quality gap, identifies current practices that impede quality care, and explores how systems approaches can be used to implement change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patient-centredness: a conceptual framework and review of the empirical literature.

TL;DR: This paper reviews the conceptual and empirical literature in order to develop a model of the various aspects of the doctor-patient relationship encompassed by the concept of 'patient-centredness' and to assess the advantages and disadvantages of alternative methods of measurement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving the quality of health care in the United Kingdom and the United States: a framework for change.

TL;DR: The multilevel change framework and associated properties provide a framework for assessing progress along the journey in efforts to sustain the impetus for quality improvement over time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patients' Perception of Hospital Care in the United States

TL;DR: This portrait of patients' experiences in U.S. hospitals offers insights into areas that need improvement, suggests that the same characteristics of hospitals that lead to high nurse-staffing levels may be associated with better experiences for patients, and offers evidence that hospitals can provide both a high quality of clinical care and a good experience for the patient.
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