Literature DB >> 17167320

Patient-provider partnerships in healthcare: enhancing knowledge translation and improving outcomes.

Terrence Montague1.   

Abstract

In the complex health arena, a key proposition is that no person acting alone is as effective as a team to drive best practices and outcomes. Another key factor supporting best outcomes is access to the best information to support best choices. Currently, stakeholders suffer from a paucity of real-world knowledge of actual practices and outcomes that allows care gaps to go undiscovered. A body of evidence indicates that measurement and timely feedback of actual practices can decrease the gaps between usual and best care. This is driven by the stakeholders' desire to be the best they can be, and it is enabled by the measured knowledge of where practices fall short of gold standards. The addition of patient partners to such communities of care offers promise of further acceleration and broader impact of knowledge translation and associated beneficial outcomes. For example, in the Improving Cardiac Outcomes in Nova Scotia (ICONS) community-based heart disease project, there was a marked decrease in rates of re-hospitalization over the five-year course of the project. This improvement was only very weakly, or not at all, related to traditional risk factors, such as the presence of multiple illnesses or older age, or to the use of efficacious medical therapies. However, ICONS provided an extensive and repeated multimedia communication among patients, families and providers of project goals, strategy and general news, as well as repeated measurements of practices and outcomes. One outcome of this shared knowledge may have been the reduced need for re-hospitalization. While exact cause-and-effect relationship remain uncertain, patient-provider integrated health networks appear feasible and offer promise for efficient knowledge creation and its population-effective translation. The model and its implementation may be improved by testing further locally responsive initiatives in innovative partnership clusters and by training more personnel resources in inter-professional settings.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17167320     DOI: 10.12927/hcpap..18558

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Healthc Pap        ISSN: 1488-917X


  5 in total

1.  Synergizing expectation and execution for stroke communities of practice innovations.

Authors:  Lise Poissant; Sara Ahmed; Richard J Riopelle; Annie Rochette; Hélène Lefebvre; Deborah Radcliffe-Branch
Journal:  Implement Sci       Date:  2010-06-08       Impact factor: 7.327

Review 2.  A narrative review of recent developments in knowledge translation and implications for mental health care providers.

Authors:  Elliot M Goldner; Emily K Jenkins; Benedikt Fischer
Journal:  Can J Psychiatry       Date:  2014-03       Impact factor: 4.356

Review 3.  Time for chronic disease care and management.

Authors:  Terrence J Montague; Amédé Gogovor; Marilyn Krelenbaum
Journal:  Can J Cardiol       Date:  2007-10       Impact factor: 5.223

4.  Evolving the theory and praxis of knowledge translation through social interaction: a social phenomenological study.

Authors:  Carol L McWilliam; Anita Kothari; Catherine Ward-Griffin; Dorothy Forbes; Beverly Leipert
Journal:  Implement Sci       Date:  2009-05-14       Impact factor: 7.327

5.  Healthy Singleton Pregnancies From Restorative Reproductive Medicine (RRM) After Failed IVF.

Authors:  Phil C Boyle; Theun de Groot; Karolina M Andralojc; Tracey A Parnell
Journal:  Front Med (Lausanne)       Date:  2018-07-31
  5 in total

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