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Patient-centredness in integrated healthcare delivery systems - needs, expectations and priorities for organised healthcare systems

INTRODUCTION: Patient-centred healthcare is becoming a more significant success factor in the design of integrated healthcare systems. The objective of this study is to structure a patient-relevant hierarchy of needs and expectations for the design of organised healthcare delivery systems. METHODS:...

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Autores principales: Juhnke, Christin, Mühlbacher, Axel C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Igitur publishing 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3860581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24363639
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author Juhnke, Christin
Mühlbacher, Axel C.
author_facet Juhnke, Christin
Mühlbacher, Axel C.
author_sort Juhnke, Christin
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Patient-centred healthcare is becoming a more significant success factor in the design of integrated healthcare systems. The objective of this study is to structure a patient-relevant hierarchy of needs and expectations for the design of organised healthcare delivery systems. METHODS: A questionnaire with 84 items was conducted with N = 254 healthcare experts and N = 670 patients. Factor analyses were performed using SPSS©18. The number of factors retained was controlled by Kaiser's criterion, validation of screeplots and interpretability of the items. Cronbach's α was used to assess the internal consistency of the subscales. RESULTS: Exploratory factor analysis led to 24 factors in the expert sample and 20 in the patient sample. After analysing the screeplots, confirmatory factor analyses were computed for 7-factor solutions accounting for 42.963% of the total variance and Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin of 0.914 for the patients (experts: 38.427%, Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin = 0.797). Cronbach's α ranged between 0.899 and 0.756. Based on the analysis, coordinated care could be differentiated into seven dimensions: access, data and information, service and infrastructure, professional care, interpersonal care, individualised care, continuity and coordination. CONCLUSION AND DISCUSSION: The study provides insight into patient and experts expectations towards the organisation of integrated healthcare delivery systems. If providers and payers can take into account patient needs and expectations while implementing innovative healthcare delivery systems, greater acceptance and satisfaction will be achieved. In the best case, this will lead to better adherence resulting in better clinical outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-38605812013-12-20 Patient-centredness in integrated healthcare delivery systems - needs, expectations and priorities for organised healthcare systems Juhnke, Christin Mühlbacher, Axel C. Int J Integr Care Research and Theory INTRODUCTION: Patient-centred healthcare is becoming a more significant success factor in the design of integrated healthcare systems. The objective of this study is to structure a patient-relevant hierarchy of needs and expectations for the design of organised healthcare delivery systems. METHODS: A questionnaire with 84 items was conducted with N = 254 healthcare experts and N = 670 patients. Factor analyses were performed using SPSS©18. The number of factors retained was controlled by Kaiser's criterion, validation of screeplots and interpretability of the items. Cronbach's α was used to assess the internal consistency of the subscales. RESULTS: Exploratory factor analysis led to 24 factors in the expert sample and 20 in the patient sample. After analysing the screeplots, confirmatory factor analyses were computed for 7-factor solutions accounting for 42.963% of the total variance and Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin of 0.914 for the patients (experts: 38.427%, Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin = 0.797). Cronbach's α ranged between 0.899 and 0.756. Based on the analysis, coordinated care could be differentiated into seven dimensions: access, data and information, service and infrastructure, professional care, interpersonal care, individualised care, continuity and coordination. CONCLUSION AND DISCUSSION: The study provides insight into patient and experts expectations towards the organisation of integrated healthcare delivery systems. If providers and payers can take into account patient needs and expectations while implementing innovative healthcare delivery systems, greater acceptance and satisfaction will be achieved. In the best case, this will lead to better adherence resulting in better clinical outcomes. Igitur publishing 2013-11-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3860581/ /pubmed/24363639 Text en Copyright 2013, Authors retain the copyright of their article http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This work is licensed under a (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0) Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License
spellingShingle Research and Theory
Juhnke, Christin
Mühlbacher, Axel C.
Patient-centredness in integrated healthcare delivery systems - needs, expectations and priorities for organised healthcare systems
title Patient-centredness in integrated healthcare delivery systems - needs, expectations and priorities for organised healthcare systems
title_full Patient-centredness in integrated healthcare delivery systems - needs, expectations and priorities for organised healthcare systems
title_fullStr Patient-centredness in integrated healthcare delivery systems - needs, expectations and priorities for organised healthcare systems
title_full_unstemmed Patient-centredness in integrated healthcare delivery systems - needs, expectations and priorities for organised healthcare systems
title_short Patient-centredness in integrated healthcare delivery systems - needs, expectations and priorities for organised healthcare systems
title_sort patient-centredness in integrated healthcare delivery systems - needs, expectations and priorities for organised healthcare systems
topic Research and Theory
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3860581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24363639
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