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Main Authors: Mildred Visser, Naomi ‘t Hart, Marleen de Mul, Anne Marie Weggelaar‐Jansen
Format: Artículo Open Access
Published: Wiley 2024
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Online Access:https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/hex.14101
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author Mildred Visser
Naomi ‘t Hart
Marleen de Mul
Anne Marie Weggelaar‐Jansen
author_facet Mildred Visser
Naomi ‘t Hart
Marleen de Mul
Anne Marie Weggelaar‐Jansen
Mildred Visser
Naomi ‘t Hart
Marleen de Mul
Anne Marie Weggelaar‐Jansen
collection Wiley Open Access
contents The Perspectives of Healthcare Professionals and Managers on Patient Involvement in Care Pathway Development: A Discourse Analysis Mildred Visser Naomi ‘t Hart Marleen de Mul Anne Marie Weggelaar‐Jansen Health Expectations ABSTRACTBackgroundThe WHO advocates patient and public involvement as an ethical imperative, due to the value of the lived experience of patients. A deeper understanding of the shared meanings and underlying beliefs of healthcare professionals and managers for and against including patients in care pathway development.ObjectiveTo explore the considerations of healthcare professionals and managers on the involvement of patients and public in care pathway development.MethodsIn a medical rehabilitation centre we conducted a single case study that was part of a 2‐year action research programme on blended care pathway development. Following 14 semistructured interviews with healthcare professionals and managers, we analysed their discourses on the value of patient involvement as well as the potential threats and opportunities.ResultsWe identified four discourses. Patient as expert frames involvement as relevant, as adding new perspectives and as required to fully understand the patient's needs. Skills and representation is based on the construct that obtaining valuable insights from patients requires certain skills and competences. Self‐protection focusses on personal, interprofessional objections to patient involvement. Professional knows best reveals expertise‐related reasons for avoiding or postponing involvement.ConclusionThese discourses explain why patient and public involvement in care pathway development is sometimes postponed, limited in scope and level of participation, and/or avoided. The following strategies might minimise the paralysing effect of these discourses: strengthen the capabilities of all stakeholders involved; use a mix of complementary techniques to gain involvement in distinct phases of care pathway development; and create/facilitate a safe environment. Put together, these strategies would foster ongoing, reciprocal learning that could enhance patient involvement.Patient or Public ContributionThis study belonged to an action research programme on blended care pathway development (developing an integrated, coordinated patient care plan that combines remote, digital telehealth applications, self‐management tools and face‐to‐face care). Multidisciplinary teams took a quality collaborative approach to quality improvement (considering patients as stakeholders) to develop 11 blended care pathways. Although professionals and managers were instructed to invite patients onto their teams and to attend care pathway design workshops, few teams (3/11) actually did. Unravelling why this happened will help improve patient and public involvement in care pathway development. 10.1111/hex.14101 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
doi_str_mv 10.1111/hex.14101
format Artículo Open Access
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institution Wiley Open Access
license_str_mv http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
publishDate 2024
publisher Wiley
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spellingShingle The Perspectives of Healthcare Professionals and Managers on Patient Involvement in Care Pathway Development: A Discourse Analysis
Mildred Visser
Naomi ‘t Hart
Marleen de Mul
Anne Marie Weggelaar‐Jansen
Health Expectations
The Perspectives of Healthcare Professionals and Managers on Patient Involvement in Care Pathway Development: A Discourse Analysis Mildred Visser Naomi ‘t Hart Marleen de Mul Anne Marie Weggelaar‐Jansen Health Expectations ABSTRACTBackgroundThe WHO advocates patient and public involvement as an ethical imperative, due to the value of the lived experience of patients. A deeper understanding of the shared meanings and underlying beliefs of healthcare professionals and managers for and against including patients in care pathway development.ObjectiveTo explore the considerations of healthcare professionals and managers on the involvement of patients and public in care pathway development.MethodsIn a medical rehabilitation centre we conducted a single case study that was part of a 2‐year action research programme on blended care pathway development. Following 14 semistructured interviews with healthcare professionals and managers, we analysed their discourses on the value of patient involvement as well as the potential threats and opportunities.ResultsWe identified four discourses. Patient as expert frames involvement as relevant, as adding new perspectives and as required to fully understand the patient's needs. Skills and representation is based on the construct that obtaining valuable insights from patients requires certain skills and competences. Self‐protection focusses on personal, interprofessional objections to patient involvement. Professional knows best reveals expertise‐related reasons for avoiding or postponing involvement.ConclusionThese discourses explain why patient and public involvement in care pathway development is sometimes postponed, limited in scope and level of participation, and/or avoided. The following strategies might minimise the paralysing effect of these discourses: strengthen the capabilities of all stakeholders involved; use a mix of complementary techniques to gain involvement in distinct phases of care pathway development; and create/facilitate a safe environment. Put together, these strategies would foster ongoing, reciprocal learning that could enhance patient involvement.Patient or Public ContributionThis study belonged to an action research programme on blended care pathway development (developing an integrated, coordinated patient care plan that combines remote, digital telehealth applications, self‐management tools and face‐to‐face care). Multidisciplinary teams took a quality collaborative approach to quality improvement (considering patients as stakeholders) to develop 11 blended care pathways. Although professionals and managers were instructed to invite patients onto their teams and to attend care pathway design workshops, few teams (3/11) actually did. Unravelling why this happened will help improve patient and public involvement in care pathway development. 10.1111/hex.14101 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title The Perspectives of Healthcare Professionals and Managers on Patient Involvement in Care Pathway Development: A Discourse Analysis
topic Health Expectations
url https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/hex.14101