Title: Patient empowerment, the key to quality improvement
1Patient empowerment, the key to quality
improvement
- Dr David Somekh
- President, European Society for Quality in
Healthcare (ESQH)
2EU Health Policy 2010A helicopter view
eHealth
Common Vocabulary Consensus On Quality Tools
Patient Safety
Patient as partner
Education for Quality e.g. communication skills
3Patient safety as an exampleThe WHO World
Alliance for Patient Safety
- Six programmes 2004-6
- Global patient safety challenge
- Patients for patient safety
- Taxonomy for patient safety
- Research for patient safety
- Solutions for patient safety
- Reporting and Learning
4WHO programme patient and consumer involvement
- Leapfrog partnership (coalition of healthcare
- purchasers and JCAHO, supported by
Medicare Medicaid) - Speak Up campaign
5Speak Up campaign
- Speak up if you have questions or concerns
- Pay attention to the care you are receiving
- Educate yourself about your condition
- Ask a trusted friend to be your advocate
- Know your medications (what and why)
- Use a health provider that measures safety
- Participate in all decisions about your care
6Sounds good?
7- If not simply a well-thought out but ineffectual
wish-list, who drives this? one or more of,
government, professional, patient, citizen? - The strategy defines the what, not the how
- Do we know what works and what doesnt?
- Do we have an evidence-base?
- What does history tell us?
8- Patient empowerment has been and still is central
to most HC Quality strategies. - By and large, is there evidence of substantial
progress in this area? NO - Is patient empowerment specifically mentioned in
the EC public health strategy 2003-8 from DGSANCO
(cf. patient safety, measurement tools etc)?
NO - Is there information available regarding current
and past activity in this area across Europe?
NO
9What kind of evidence do we have?
- In other areas of quality the initiatives follow
a similar pattern - - Map current activity what is happening?
- - make this a living database to
continue to update - 2. Get a consensus on terms and vocabulary
- 3. Establish a tool-box of validated methods
for measurement (using the best advice available,
from experts) - - define the role of guidelines
and indicators
10- 4. Develop a small set of strategic approaches,
to help late starters and those early in their
journey not to have to re-invent the wheel - 5. Spend a lot of time and effort disseminating
the results of activities 1-4, ensuring that
there are versions of the information translated
to the needs of the different stakeholders
(politicians, policy makers, health providers
e.g. managers, insurers, professionals, patients
and citizens)
11- This hasnt yet been undertaken for patient
empowerment. - A multi-national project, acronym EMPowER has
been designed, but so far has not attracted EU
financial support, although further bids will be
made to DG Research and to DGSANCO soon - However, activity within this field in the UK has
been well charted over the last few years -
12- Increased responsiveness to patients has been a
goal for UK health policy for several decades - Consumerism was promoted in the 90s as part of
a strategy to drive up quality standards and VFM - The rhetoric of patient power is still a feature
of government statements, but the emphasis has
subtly shifted (A.Coulter 2003) - The patient is no longer primarily a consumer but
increasingly a partner
13- Patient empowerment (and the responsibilities
that it brings) has become a key element in the
strategy for managing demand - Since the Bristol enquiry (and Shipman) the
Government has made patient-centredness central
to subsequent policy statements (e.g. the NHS
plan, July 2000)
14- But hold on a minute! If you refer back to slide
2, our overview of HC quality strategy, the
patient is central to that diagram too! - That means that the politicians and ourselves
seem to be pointing in the same direction whats
happening? - The paths that we took to get here may have been
different, the question is, what lessons have
been learnt that provide us (and them) with the
information needed to make real progress?
15- There is a growing body of evidence to
demonstrate that patient engagement in treatment
decisions and in managing their own healthcare
leads to greater appropriateness and better
outcomes - Four key strategy areas
- information (e.g. NHS Direct, NSFs)
- feedback (e.g. PALS, patient survey)
- choice (e.g. deals if W/L exceeds deadline)
- influence (e.g. patient forum)
16- Coulter (2003) the strategy is commendable and
some good progress has been made but - a critical stocktaking of activities to date
reveals a collection of disconnected activities
rather than a coherent, joined-up strategy.
Therefore what is needed is - more co-ordination
- more attention to the evidence base underpinning
initiatives - a specific strategy for public and patient
information - communication skills training for all clinicians
172005 update (A) Harry Cayton Director for
patients and the public (Paris lecture, April)
- The Wanless report Securing our Future Health
(2002) identified a massive growth of health
costs in the future unless demand was reduced and
supply improved. Health services must be more
productive and people more engaged in their own
healthcare. - Health literacy the ability to understand our
own health (i.e. knowledge) and to act
appropriately (management skills for own health
or illness) inevitably linked to literacy
itself and other indicators of health inequality
18- Health literacy is not directly linked to
knowledge. If it were, health education would be
enough to transform behaviour it isnt. - People need to be persuaded by government
(through information, regulation and incentives)
to make healthy choices.
19- Information partnerships e.g. ask about
medicines - Self-care e.g. the Expert Patient Programme
- Feed-back need better survey and other data
- Influence more effective engagement
- BUT structural arrangements are only part of the
picture. - Cultural change is at the heart of creating a
fully engaged health community - And it isnt easy
20- Fully engaged patients need responsive, fully
engaged partners. This means a shift in attitude
and practice and skills for healthcare and public
health professionals a shift perhaps away from
knowledge to communication, from decision making
to supporting choice. - For patients choice means greater personal
responsibility, a requirement to become active
rather than passive in pursuit of personal
well-being and quality of life (Cayton 2005)
21 2005 Update (B) Angela Coulter CEO Picker
Institute (RSM lecture October)
- The active patient co-producer of health,
- autonomous partner in treating, managing and
- preventing disease
- well informed has referral
choices - discerning treatment
choices facil- - manages own health
itated - accesses improved manages own care
- consultation as needed active citizen
22- If this is our concept of the future patient,
what steps do we now take to make progress? - Increase patient engagement by-
- building health literacy
- supporting self care and self-management
- offering a choice of providers
- sharing treatment decisions
23Health literacy what works?
- Printed materials professional advice can
improve knowledge and recall - Personalised information and education works best
- Internet programmes can be effective
- Targeted mass media campaigns can affect health
behaviours and use of health services - Limited evidence of impact on health inequalities
24Health literacy evidence base from 14 systematic
reviews
- health knowledge improved
- patients experience improvements in
satisfaction and self-efficacy - utilisation and cost some positive effects
- health status - unknown
25Strategies to improve self-care
- self-help guides
- self-monitoring at home
- self-medication (move to OTC)
- patient-held records
- telephone support (telecare)
- lay-led self-management education (e.g. EPP)
- Support for self care/management from health
- professionals integrated into HC process
26Education for self-care evidence base from 49
systematic reviews
- health knowledge improved
- patients experience positive short-term
effects - utilisation and cost some positive short-term
effects - health status limited short-term effects
27Choosing providers implementation issues
- patients want choice but lack reliable
information for informed choices - non-clinical staff have an important role to play
- information on quality and safety as important as
information about practical arrangements - publishing performance data can stimulate quality
improvement efforts - need for careful monitoring equity, quality,
patients rights
28Choosing providers the evidence base (no
systematic reviews)
- health knowledge not known, but public
reporting can stimulate QI - patients experience positive
- utilisation and cost mixed evidence on uptake
rates - health status - unknown
29Shared decision-making implementation issues
- shared decision-making and informed choice is
feasible and probably cost-effective - patients need time to consider preferences good
quality information and decision aids - clinicians need training in handling uncertainty,
communicating risk and sharing decisions
30Shared decision-making evidence base from 17
systematic reviews
- health knowledge improved
- patients experience improved
- utilisation and cost mainly positive effects
- health status no effect
31Summary of Picker Institute evidence on effects
of patient empowerment/engagement
- health knowledge definitely improved
- patients experience generally improved
- utilisation and cost some limited positive
effects - health status few effects, largely unknown
32EU Health Policy 2010A helicopter view
eHealth
Common Vocabulary Consensus On Quality Tools
Patient Safety
Patient as partner
Education for Quality e.g. communication skills
33Patient empowerment/engagement conclusions
- If health systems are to remain viable, patient
engagement needs to get greater policy priority - It is clear how this quality area is an essential
part of more or less all other key quality areas - It is an area often paid lip service to, and the
evidence base, when investigated, is patchy - Implementation is difficult because it requires
major cultural change within healthcare - The responsibility to drive this process has not
been taken, due to cost/benefit uncertainty
34- Contact ESQH on www.esqh.net
35References
- Engaging patients and citizens. A.Coulter (2003)
chap.12 in The quest for quality in the NHS a
mid-term evaluation of a ten year quality
agenda. Pp.183-202. The Nuffield Trust London,
TSO. - World alliance for patient safety forward
programme (2004). (pdf) WHO (available on-line) - The flat-pack patient? Co-creating health and
health services. H.Cayton (2005) (paper given at
World health Congress. Paris, April 2005) - Involved, consenting or empowered? A.Coulter
(2005) RSM lecture. London, October 2005