| Literature DB >> 29482622 |
Donna Goodridge1, Chrysanthus Henry2, Erin Watson3, Meghan McDonald4, Lucia New4, Elizabeth L Harrison5, Murray Scharf6, Erika Penz7, Steve Campbell8, Thomas Rotter9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While effective engagement of patients and families in treatment is increasingly viewed as a priority for many healthcare systems, much remains to be learned about the nature and outcomes of approaches that seek to accomplish this goal in the acute care hospital setting. Wide variability in the implementation of practices designed to promote patient and family engagement in hospitals has been noted. Approaches aimed at promoting patient and family engagement in treatment share the over-arching goal of changing behaviors of patients, families, and healthcare providers and possibly administrators. Behavior change techniques (BCTs) can be a key element of patient and family engagement approaches. This scoping review will contribute to the development of an evidence base detailing that the BCTs have potential to be effective in patient and family engagement interventions. The specific objectives of this review are to (a) identify and classify approaches used in acute care hospitals to engage patient and families in treatment according to the behavior change technique taxonomy; and (b) evaluate and synthesize the outcomes for these approaches for patients and families, healthcare providers, and health administrators/funders.Entities:
Keywords: Acute care hospitals; Patient and family engagement; Patient and family-centered care: behavior change techniques
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29482622 PMCID: PMC5827976 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-018-0694-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Intersection of the domains of the framework for safe, reliable and effective care and direct patient and family engagement (Adapted from Frankel et al., [9])
| IHI domain | Patient and family engagement strategies |
|---|---|
| Leadership and accountability | Patients and the healthcare need to agree on goals and clearly define roles and accountability for goal achievement |
| Clinical team members offer advice on clinical components | |
| Patients and families give their perspectives until there is agreement on goals | |
| Teamwork and communication | Patients and families are considered part of the team and receive accurate, timely, and relevant communication about their health and care |
| Psychological safety | Patients should feel psychologically safe to share their concerns with the clinical team |
| Healthcare team members receive patient perspectives openly and without judgment | |
| Patients are encouraged to be transparent about clinical signs, symptoms and treatment adherence | |
| Negotiation | The healthcare team engages in collaborative negotiation with patients and families |
| Healthcare team knows the patients’ priorities, worries, and desired outcomes | |
| Transparency | Transparency with patients and families, particularly with respect to adverse events, is promoted |
| Opportunities for patients and families to engage in care, making use of opportunities such as patient portals | |
| Reliability | Patients can help to develop ways to make the process more reliable |
| Improvement and measurement | Patients share perspectives, experiences, and ideas about ongoing improvement efforts |
Overview of behavior change techniques [25]
| BCT category | Example and definition |
|---|---|
| Goals and planning | |
| Feedback and monitoring | |
| Social support | |
| Shaping knowledge | |
| Natural consequences | |
| Comparison of behavior | |
| Associations | |
| Repetition and substitution | |
| Comparison of outcomes | |
| Reward and threat | |
| Regulation | |
| Antecedents | |
| Identity | |
| Scheduled consequences | |
| Self-belief | |
| Covert learning |
Evidence ratings [27]
| Strong evidence of effect | More than one study with a MMAT rating of **** |
| Moderate evidence of effect | One or more studies with a MMAT of *** |
| Limited evidence of effect | One or more studies with a MMAT rating of ** or less |
| Conflicting evidence | Inconsistent findings across studies, with MMAT ratings of *** or more |
| No evidence | No studies, or conflicting findings with MMAT ratings of ** or less |
*Overall methodological rating (*one criterion met to ****all criteria met)