Institute of Public Health, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health, Berlin, Germany.
Institute of Social Medicine and Epidemiology, Brandenburg Medical School Theodor Fontane, Brandenburg an der Havel, Germany.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Jun 16;22(1):785. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-08063-6.
The concept of patient navigation was first established in the USA to support vulnerable patient groups in receiving timely and comprehensive access to cancer care. It has recently gained increasing interest in Germany to support patients with chronic diseases in a fragmented healthcare system. The aim of this paper is to present the development of such a model adapted to the German context based on the results of mixed-methods studies investigating the need for and barriers to patient-oriented care.
In a process adapted from Delphi rounds, we conducted regular structured workshops with investigators of the project to discuss results of their studies and identify content and structure of the model based on the data. Workshop discussions were structured along seven core components of a navigation model including target patient groups, navigator tasks, occupational background and education of navigators, and patient-navigator interaction mode.
Using an approach based on empirical data of current care practices with special focus on patients' perspectives, we developed a patient-oriented navigation model for patients who have experienced stroke and lung cancer in the German healthcare context. Patients without personal social support were viewed as struggling most with the healthcare system, as well as multimorbid and elderly patients. Navigators should serve as a longer-term contact person with a flexible contact mode and timing based on the individual situation and preferences of patients. Navigator tasks include the provision of administrative and organizational support as well as referral and guidance to available resources and beneficial health programs with special forms of knowledge. Implementation of the navigator should be flexibly located to ensure a reliable outreach to vulnerable patients for first contact in settings like specialized in-patient and out-patient settings, while navigation itself focuses on care coordination in the out-patient setting.
Flexibility of navigator tasks needed to be a core characteristic of a navigation model to be perceived as supportive from patients' perspectives. In a subsequent feasibility study, an intervention based on the model will be evaluated according to its acceptance, demand, and practicality.
患者导航的概念最初在美国确立,旨在为弱势群体提供及时、全面的癌症护理。最近,它在德国越来越受到关注,以支持在碎片化医疗体系下患有慢性病的患者。本文旨在介绍根据混合方法研究的结果,为适应德国国情而开发的这种模式。这些研究调查了患者导向护理的需求和障碍。
我们采用德尔菲法(Delphi rounds)的改编流程,定期与项目的研究者进行结构化研讨会,讨论他们的研究结果,并根据数据确定模型的内容和结构。研讨会讨论围绕导航模型的七个核心组成部分展开,包括目标患者群体、导航员任务、职业背景和导航员教育,以及患者-导航员互动模式。
我们采用了一种基于当前护理实践的经验数据的方法,特别关注患者的观点,为德国医疗保健背景下经历过中风和肺癌的患者开发了一种患者导向的导航模型。没有个人社会支持的患者被认为在医疗体系中最困难,包括多病和老年患者。导航员应作为一个长期的联系人,根据患者的个人情况和偏好,灵活选择联系模式和时间。导航员的任务包括提供行政和组织支持,以及将患者转介和引导至可用资源和有益的健康计划,特别需要掌握特定形式的知识。导航员的实施应灵活定位,以确保在专门的住院和门诊环境等脆弱患者群体中进行可靠的初步接触,而导航本身则侧重于门诊环境中的护理协调。
从患者的角度来看,导航员任务的灵活性需要成为导航模型的核心特征,才能被认为具有支持性。在随后的可行性研究中,将根据模型的接受度、需求和实用性来评估基于该模型的干预措施。