VA Center for Mental Healthcare and Outcomes Research, 2200 Fort Roots Drive, Building 11, North Little Rock, AR, 72114, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, 4301 W Markham St, Little Rock, AR, 72205, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Jan 4;24(1):29. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-10315-y.
One practice in healthcare implementation is patient engagement in quality improvement and systems redesign. Implementers in healthcare systems include clinical leadership, middle managers, quality improvement personnel, and others facilitating changes or adoption of new interventions. Patients provide input into different aspects of health research. However, there is little attention to involve patients in implementing interventions, especially in the United States (U.S.), and this might be essential to reduce inequities. Implementers need clear strategies to overcome challenges, and might be able to learn from countries outside the U.S.
We wanted to understand existing work about how patients are being included in implementation activities in real world U.S. healthcare settings. We conducted an environmental scan of three data sources: webinars, published articles, and interviews with implementers who engaged patients in implementation activities in U.S. healthcare settings. We extracted, categorized, and triangulated from data sources the key activities, recurring challenges, and promising solutions using a coding template.
We found 27 examples of patient engagement in U.S. healthcare implementation across four webinars, 11 published articles, and seven interviews, mostly arranging patient engagement through groups and arranging processes for patients that changed how engaged they were able to be. Participants rarely specified if they were engaging a population experiencing healthcare inequities. Participants described eight recurring challenges; the two most frequently identified were: (1) recruiting patients representative of those served in the healthcare system; and (2) ensuring processes for equitable communication among all. We matched recurring challenges to promising solutions, such as logistic solutions on how to arrange meetings to enhance engagement or training in inclusivity and power-sharing.
We clarified how some U.S. implementers are engaging patients in healthcare implementation activities using less and more intensive engagement. It was unclear whether reducing inequities was a goal. Patient engagement in redesigning U.S. healthcare service delivery appears similar to or less intense than in countries with more robust infrastructure for this, such as Canada and the United Kingdom. Challenges were common across jurisdictions, including retaining patients in the design/delivery of implementation activities. Implementers in any region can learn from those in other places.
医疗保健实施中的一种做法是让患者参与质量改进和系统重新设计。医疗保健系统中的实施者包括临床领导、中层管理人员、质量改进人员和其他促进变革或采用新干预措施的人员。患者为不同方面的健康研究提供投入。然而,很少有关注让患者参与实施干预措施,特别是在美国,这对于减少不平等现象可能至关重要。实施者需要明确的策略来克服挑战,并且可能能够从美国以外的国家吸取经验。
我们想了解在美国现实医疗保健环境中,让患者参与实施活动的现有工作。我们对三个数据源进行了环境扫描:网络研讨会、已发表的文章和与在美国医疗保健环境中参与实施活动的实施者进行的访谈。我们使用编码模板从数据源中提取、分类和三角验证了关键活动、反复出现的挑战和有希望的解决方案。
我们在四个网络研讨会、十一篇已发表的文章和七次访谈中发现了 27 个美国医疗保健实施中患者参与的例子,主要通过小组安排患者参与,并为患者安排改变他们参与能力的流程。参与者很少指定他们是否在参与医疗保健服务不足的人群。参与者描述了八个反复出现的挑战;最常被识别的两个挑战是:(1)招募在医疗保健系统中服务的代表性患者;以及(2)确保所有人群之间公平沟通的流程。我们将反复出现的挑战与有希望的解决方案相匹配,例如关于如何安排会议以增强参与度的后勤解决方案,或关于包容性和权力分享的培训。
我们澄清了一些美国实施者如何通过较少和更多的强化参与来让患者参与医疗保健实施活动。尚不清楚减少不平等是否是一个目标。在美国,重新设计医疗保健服务提供的患者参与程度似乎与加拿大和英国等拥有更强大基础设施的国家相似或程度较低。挑战在所有司法管辖区都很常见,包括在实施活动的设计/交付过程中留住患者。任何地区的实施者都可以从其他地方吸取经验。