University of Northern British Columbia, School of Health Sciences, TLC building 10-3516, 3333 University Way, Prince George, BC V2N 4Z9, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2013 Apr 29;13:155. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-155.
Patient-centred care emerged in the late 1960s as a framework to guide providers and decision-makers towards the provision of more effective health care and better outcomes. An important body of literature has since emerged, reporting mixed results in terms of outcomes. To date, assessments of the effectiveness of patient-centred approaches have focused one-on-one consultations. The purpose of this article is to explore dimensions identified as key in the patient-centred literature in the context of primary health care services delivered in a group setting. Group Medical Visits (GMVs) offer a novel format for the delivery of patient-centred primary health care services, especially for patients living with complex morbidities.
Drawing on a large study of GMVs, we report on key format and process-oriented elements identified in GMVs, and on their link to improved outcomes. For the purpose of this study, we interviewed 34 providers and 29 patients who have been engaged in GMVs, delivered in rural, northern and First Nation communities in British Columbia, Canada.
Our analysis shows that the delivery of PHC in a group format results in a shift in the role of the provider, from that of an adjudicator involved in imparting norms of self-care, to that of a facilitator who assists the group in defining norms of self-care that are based on medical knowledge but also on the broader context of patients' lived experience and on their pragmatic experience. In a group process, peer-patients take on the role of promoting these norms to other patients. This results in a significant shift in the role of the provider, increased trust, increased knowledge for the providers and the patients and better patient self-management. Our results also show increase satisfaction for patients and providers.
GMVs offer an alternative format for the provision of PHC that brings together the benefit of a group process and of a clinical encounter. This format can successfully deliver on the promises of patient-centred care.
以患者为中心的护理模式于 20 世纪 60 年代末出现,旨在指导医疗服务提供者和决策者提供更有效的医疗保健和更好的结果。此后,出现了大量报告,这些报告在结果方面显示出混合的结果。迄今为止,对以患者为中心方法的有效性评估集中在一对一的咨询上。本文的目的是探讨在以小组形式提供初级保健服务的背景下,以患者为中心的文献中确定的关键维度。小组医疗访问 (GMV) 为提供以患者为中心的初级保健服务提供了一种新颖的形式,特别是对于患有复杂疾病的患者。
借鉴 GMV 的大型研究,我们报告了 GMV 中确定的关键格式和面向过程的要素,以及它们与改善结果的联系。为此目的,我们采访了在加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省农村、北部和第一民族社区参与 GMV 的 34 名提供者和 29 名患者。
我们的分析表明,以小组形式提供 PHC 会导致提供者角色的转变,从参与传授自我保健规范的裁决者转变为协助小组根据医疗知识但也根据患者生活经历和实践经验定义自我保健规范的促进者。在小组过程中,同伴患者承担向其他患者宣传这些规范的角色。这导致提供者角色发生重大转变,增加了提供者和患者的信任、知识,以及更好的患者自我管理。我们的研究结果还表明,患者和提供者的满意度都有所提高。
GMV 为提供 PHC 提供了一种替代形式,将小组过程和临床接触的优势结合在一起。这种形式可以成功地实现以患者为中心的护理的承诺。