Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, University Health Network, 200 Elizabeth Street, Toronto M5G2C4, Canada.
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, 155 College Street, Toronto M5T 3M6, Canada.
Int J Qual Health Care. 2021 Nov 13;33(4). doi: 10.1093/intqhc/mzab147.
Patient and family engagement (PE) in healthcare planning and improvement achieves beneficial outcomes and is widely advocated, but a lack of resources is a critical barrier. Little prior research studied how organizations support engagement specifically in hospitals.
We explored what constitutes hospital capacity for engagement.
We conducted descriptive qualitative interviews and complied with criteria for rigour and reporting in qualitative research. We interviewed patient/family advisors, engagement managers, clinicians and executives at hospitals with high engagement activity, asking them to describe essential resources or processes. We used content analysis and constant comparison to identify themes and corresponding quotes and interpreted findings by mapping themes to two existing frameworks of PE capacity not specific to hospitals.
We interviewed 40 patient/family advisors, patient engagement managers, clinicians and corporate executives from nine hospitals (two < 100 beds, four 100 + beds, three teaching). Four over-arching themes about capacity considered essential included resources, training, organizational commitment and staff support. Views were similar across participant and hospital groups. Resources included funding and people dedicated to PE and technology to enable communication and collaboration. Training encompassed initial orientation and project-specific training for patient/family advisors and orientation for new staff and training for existing staff on how to engage with patient/family advisors. Organizational commitment included endorsement from the CEO and Board, commitment from staff and continuous evaluation and improvement. Staff support included words and actions that conveyed value for the role and input of patient/family advisors. The blended, non-hospital-specific framework captured all themes. Hospitals of all types varied in the availability of funding dedicated to PE. In particular, reimbursement of expenses and compensation for time and contributions were not provided to patient/family advisors. In addition to skilled engagement managers, the role of clinician or staff champions was viewed as essential.
The findings build on prior research that largely focused on PE in individual clinical care or research or in primary care planning and improvement. The findings closely aligned with existing frameworks of organizational capacity for PE not specific to hospital settings, which suggests that hospitals could use the blended framework to plan, evaluate and improve their PE programs. Further research is needed to yield greater insight into how to promote and enable compensation for patient/family advisors and the role of clinician or staff champions in supporting PE.
患者和家属参与(PE)医疗保健规划和改进可实现有益的结果,并得到广泛提倡,但资源匮乏是一个关键障碍。先前很少有研究专门研究组织如何支持参与医院。
我们探讨了构成参与能力的因素。
我们进行了描述性定性访谈,并符合定性研究的严谨性和报告标准。我们采访了患者/家属顾问、参与经理、临床医生和高管,询问他们描述必要的资源或流程。我们使用内容分析和恒定性比较来识别主题和相应的引语,并通过将主题映射到两个不特定于医院的现有 PE 能力框架来解释发现。
我们采访了九家医院(两家<100 张床,四家 100+张床,三家教学医院)的 40 名患者/家属顾问、患者参与经理、临床医生和企业高管。关于能力的四个总体主题被认为是必不可少的,包括资源、培训、组织承诺和员工支持。参与者和医院群体的观点相似。资源包括专门用于 PE 的资金和人员以及用于沟通和协作的技术。培训包括患者/家属顾问的初步定向和项目特定培训,以及新员工的入职培训和现有员工如何与患者/家属顾问合作的培训。组织承诺包括首席执行官和董事会的认可、员工的承诺以及持续的评估和改进。员工支持包括表达对角色的重视和对患者/家属顾问投入的重视的言语和行动。混合的、非医院特定的框架涵盖了所有主题。各种类型的医院在专门用于 PE 的资金可用性方面存在差异。特别是,患者/家属顾问的费用报销和薪酬补偿没有得到提供。除了熟练的参与经理外,临床医生或员工拥护者的角色也被认为是必不可少的。
这些发现建立在先前的研究基础上,这些研究主要集中在个体临床护理或研究中的 PE 或初级保健规划和改进上。这些发现与现有的组织 PE 能力框架非常吻合,这些框架不特定于医院环境,这表明医院可以使用混合框架来规划、评估和改进他们的 PE 计划。需要进一步研究,以深入了解如何促进和为患者/家属顾问提供补偿以及临床医生或员工拥护者在支持 PE 方面的作用。