Graduate School of Social Service, Fordham University, 113 West 60th Street, New York, New York.
Indus Health Network, Plot C-76, Sector 31/5, Opposite Darussalam Society, Korangi Crossing, Karachi, 75190, Pakistan.
J Eval Clin Pract. 2019 Dec;25(6):1160-1168. doi: 10.1111/jep.13242. Epub 2019 Jul 23.
This study examined the perspectives of 18 health care providers (nurses, consultant doctors, residents, radiologists, and physiotherapists) and 18 patients regarding best practices for patient-centred care (PCC) in a free private hospital in Pakistan, studying the congruence between provider and patient perspectives.
Six focus group interviews (FGIs) were conducted from January to March 2017: three with providers and three with patients. Focus group interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. A deductive approach was used to analyse the data using the key dimensions of Scholl's framework, which was then complemented with constant comparison analysis to explore variability and similarity among participants across the six focus groups.
Findings indicated that providers and patients acknowledged maintaining a collaborative relationship with patients by using empathy. Patients and providers agreed that providers allocated time to counsel the patient and alleviated their fears. Family involvement was seen as a key indicator in decision making for patients. Some discrepancies were found between patient and provider perceptions of inhibitors to PCC, notably a lack of teamwork exhibited by providers and continuity of care offered postdischarge.
We recommend practices of PCC that are congruent with non-Western settings where religion and family play a primary role in matters dealing with patients' illnesses. Our findings suggest the need for recurrent training to improve teamwork among providers; questioning the implicit agreement of patients who may be vulnerable to decision making of authoritarian figures in their family; and the inclusion of peer-support workers or community health workers to offer aftercare support to patients in their home.
本研究调查了 18 名医疗保健提供者(护士、顾问医生、住院医生、放射科医生和物理治疗师)和 18 名患者对巴基斯坦一家私立免费医院中以患者为中心的护理(PCC)最佳实践的看法,研究了提供者和患者观点之间的一致性。
2017 年 1 月至 3 月期间进行了六次焦点小组访谈(FGI):三次与提供者进行,三次与患者进行。对焦点小组访谈进行了录音和逐字记录。采用演绎方法,使用 Scholl 框架的关键维度分析数据,然后使用恒比分析来探索六个焦点小组中参与者之间的差异和相似性。
研究结果表明,提供者和患者都承认通过使用同理心与患者保持协作关系。患者和提供者都认为,提供者应该分配时间为患者提供咨询和减轻他们的恐惧。家庭参与被视为患者决策的一个关键指标。在 PCC 的障碍方面,患者和提供者的看法存在一些差异,特别是提供者缺乏团队合作以及出院后的护理连续性。
我们建议采用与非西方背景一致的 PCC 实践,在这些背景下,宗教和家庭在涉及患者疾病的问题上起着主要作用。我们的研究结果表明,需要定期进行培训,以改善提供者之间的团队合作;质疑可能容易受到家庭中权威人物决策影响的患者的默许同意;并包括同伴支持工作者或社区卫生工作者,为患者在家中提供后续支持。