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1.
Healthc Pap ; 17(2): 8-20, 2017 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29595439

ABSTRACT

People's experiences can provide critical guidance on how to better meet their quality of life and care needs and deploy resources more appropriately. To maximize the utility of experience data and to advance the current debate, we present four recommendations: (1) measuring experiences outside the healthcare system can provide insight into what needs to change within the healthcare system; (2) focusing on patient experience is necessary but insufficient, (family) caregiver insights and experiences require attention and can provide insight into the needs of the patient; (3) moving from "one time/single sector" measurement of experience to iterative, ongoing measurement across sectors better reflects the true lived experience of patients (especially those with complex care needs) and their caregivers; and (4) embedding measurement within engagement-capable environments that adequately resource patients, caregivers, and providers to work together is required to move from collection to meaningful change. Applying these recommendations requires a longer-term vision, shifting from provider-centred to person-centred models of care, and a deep understanding of the structural, cultural, and normative barriers to measuring care experiences.


Subject(s)
Caregivers/psychology , Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Patient Satisfaction , Patient-Centered Care/methods , Quality Indicators, Health Care/trends , Family , Humans , Time Factors
2.
Healthc Pap ; 17(2): 73-78, 2017 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29595448

ABSTRACT

We are grateful for the thoughtful discussion and ideas put forth in this issue on the measurement of healthcare experiences. Our colleagues, who span multiple jurisdictions across Canada and internationally, agree that we need to do a better job at engaging patients and families in their care and measuring their experiences across health services and sectors. In this response paper, we reflect on three core content areas that were identified across the eight papers in this issue: the role of context and engagement-capable environments; approaches to improve the measurement of experience and acting on results; and challenges that must be attended to in our quest to make our healthcare systems work better.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Government Programs , Canada , Humans
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