Title: Primary care from the patients perspective
1Primary care from the patients perspective
- Angela Coulter
- Picker Institute Europe
- www.pickereurope.org
2What do patients want?
3What patients want
- Fast access to reliable health advice
- Effective treatment delivered by trusted
professionals - Participation in decisions and respect for
preferences - Clear, comprehensible information and support for
self-care - Attention to physical and environmental needs
- Emotional support, empathy, and respect
- Involvement of, and support for, family and
carers - Continuity of care and smooth transitions
4What do patients want?
- Fast access to reliable health advice
- Effective treatment delivered by trusted
professionals - Participation in decisions and respect for
preferences - Clear, comprehensible information and support for
self-care - Attention to physical and environmental needs
- Emotional support, empathy, and respect
- Involvement of, and support for, family and
carers - Continuity of care and smooth transitions
5Work in partnership with patients
- Listen to patients and respond to their concerns
and preferences - Give patients the information they want or need
in a way they can understand - Respect patients right to reach decisions with
you about their treatment and care - Support patients in caring for themselves to
improve and maintain their health - Good Medical Practice 2006
6Sharing expertise
- CLINICIAN
- diagnosis
- disease aetiology
- prognosis
- treatment options
- outcome probabilities
- PATIENT
- experience of illness
- social circumstances
- attitude to risk
- values
- preferences
7What do they get?
- Listen to patients
- Understand their preferences
- Give information
- Communicate risk
- Share decisions
- Support self-care
8Would have liked more involvement in treatment
decisions (NHS patient surveys, England 2004/5)
9Doctor always gives information about treatment
choices and elicits patients preferences
Commonwealth Fund survey 2005
10Patients with chronic conditions who were given
self-management plans
Commonwealth Fund survey 2005
11Why encourage patient participation?
- To ensure appropriate treatment and care
- To improve health outcomes
- To reduce risk factors and prevent ill-health
- To improve safety
- To reduce complaints and litigation
- To comply with modern professional standards
12Improve information and risk communication
- Doctors are seen as the primary source of
information - Personalised information is best
- Communicating risk is a highly skilled task
13Share decisions
- Review benefits, harms and uncertainties
- Explore role preference
- Clarify values
- Make a decision
- Plan next steps
14Support self-care
- Give advice on prevention and risk factors
- Help patients to look after themselves
- Educate patients in how to manage chronic
conditions - Give information about medication side-effects
- Encourage self-monitoring
15Competencies for patient partnership
- Clinicians need to learn how to
- Guide patients to appropriate information sources
- Educate patients about prevention
- Elicit and understand patients preferences
- Offer choices (providers/treatments)
- Communicate information on risk and probability
- Share treatment decisions
- Provide support for self-care and self-management
16Patient feedback can be used to assess
professional behaviours
- Use well validated standardised questionnaires in
educational assessment, appraisal and
revalidation - Compare results against national benchmarks
- Determine priorities for improvement
- Celebrate success
17The new patient
- Instant telephone / email access to advice
- Access to quality assured websites
- Self-diagnosis, self-medication, self-care
- Control of electronic health records
- Involvement in treatment decisions
- Free choice of provider
18The new professional
- Excellent clinical knowledge and skills
- Educator, facilitator, information broker
- Excellent communication and negotiation skills
- Time for the patient and empathy
- Skilled team-worker
- Partners in care patient is co-producer
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