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My Goals Are Not Their Goals: Barriers and Facilitators to Delivery of Patient-Centered Care for Patients with Multimorbidity

BACKGROUND: Patient-centered care reflecting patient preferences and needs is integral to high-quality care. Individualized care is important for psychosocially complex or high-risk patients with multiple chronic conditions (i.e., multimorbidity), given greater potential risks of interventions and r...

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Autores principales: Schuttner, Linnaea, Hockett Sherlock, Stacey, Simons, Carol E., Johnson, Nicole L., Wirtz, Elizabeth, Ralston, James D., Rosland, Ann-Marie, Nelson, Karin, Sayre, George
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9126696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35606644
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07533-1
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author Schuttner, Linnaea
Hockett Sherlock, Stacey
Simons, Carol E.
Johnson, Nicole L.
Wirtz, Elizabeth
Ralston, James D.
Rosland, Ann-Marie
Nelson, Karin
Sayre, George
author_facet Schuttner, Linnaea
Hockett Sherlock, Stacey
Simons, Carol E.
Johnson, Nicole L.
Wirtz, Elizabeth
Ralston, James D.
Rosland, Ann-Marie
Nelson, Karin
Sayre, George
author_sort Schuttner, Linnaea
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Patient-centered care reflecting patient preferences and needs is integral to high-quality care. Individualized care is important for psychosocially complex or high-risk patients with multiple chronic conditions (i.e., multimorbidity), given greater potential risks of interventions and reduced benefits. These patients are increasingly prevalent in primary care. Few studies have examined provision of patient-centered care from the clinician perspective, particularly from primary care physicians serving in integrated, patient-centered medical home settings within the US Veterans Health Administration. OBJECTIVE: We sought to clarify facilitators and barriers perceived by primary care physicians in the Veterans Health Administration to delivering patient-centered care for high-risk or complex patients with multimorbidity. DESIGN: We conducted semi-structured telephone interviews from April to July 2020 among physicians across 20 clinical sites. Findings were analyzed with deductive content analysis based on conceptual models of patient-centeredness and hierarchical factors affecting care delivery. PARTICIPANTS: Of 23 physicians interviewed, most were female (n = 14/23, 61%), serving in hospital-affiliated outpatient clinics (n = 14/23, 61%). Participants had a mean of 21 (SD = 11.3) years of experience. KEY RESULTS: Facilitators included the following: effective physician-patient communication to individualize care, prioritize among multiple needs, and elicit goals to improve patient engagement; access to care, enabled by interdisciplinary teams, and dictating personalized care planning; effortful but worthwhile care coordination and continuity; meeting complex needs through effective teamwork; and integrating medical and non-medical care aspects in recognition of patients’ psychosocial contexts. Barriers included the following: intra- and interpersonal (e.g., perceived patient reluctance to engage in care); organizational (e.g., limited encounter time); and community or policy impediments (e.g., state decisional capacity laws) to patient-centered care. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians perceived individual physician-patient interactions were the greatest facilitators or barriers to patient-centered care. Efforts to increase primary care patient-centeredness for complex or high-risk patients with multimorbidity could focus on targeting physician-patient communication and reducing interpersonal conflict.
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spelling pubmed-91266962022-05-24 My Goals Are Not Their Goals: Barriers and Facilitators to Delivery of Patient-Centered Care for Patients with Multimorbidity Schuttner, Linnaea Hockett Sherlock, Stacey Simons, Carol E. Johnson, Nicole L. Wirtz, Elizabeth Ralston, James D. Rosland, Ann-Marie Nelson, Karin Sayre, George J Gen Intern Med Original Research: Qualitative Research BACKGROUND: Patient-centered care reflecting patient preferences and needs is integral to high-quality care. Individualized care is important for psychosocially complex or high-risk patients with multiple chronic conditions (i.e., multimorbidity), given greater potential risks of interventions and reduced benefits. These patients are increasingly prevalent in primary care. Few studies have examined provision of patient-centered care from the clinician perspective, particularly from primary care physicians serving in integrated, patient-centered medical home settings within the US Veterans Health Administration. OBJECTIVE: We sought to clarify facilitators and barriers perceived by primary care physicians in the Veterans Health Administration to delivering patient-centered care for high-risk or complex patients with multimorbidity. DESIGN: We conducted semi-structured telephone interviews from April to July 2020 among physicians across 20 clinical sites. Findings were analyzed with deductive content analysis based on conceptual models of patient-centeredness and hierarchical factors affecting care delivery. PARTICIPANTS: Of 23 physicians interviewed, most were female (n = 14/23, 61%), serving in hospital-affiliated outpatient clinics (n = 14/23, 61%). Participants had a mean of 21 (SD = 11.3) years of experience. KEY RESULTS: Facilitators included the following: effective physician-patient communication to individualize care, prioritize among multiple needs, and elicit goals to improve patient engagement; access to care, enabled by interdisciplinary teams, and dictating personalized care planning; effortful but worthwhile care coordination and continuity; meeting complex needs through effective teamwork; and integrating medical and non-medical care aspects in recognition of patients’ psychosocial contexts. Barriers included the following: intra- and interpersonal (e.g., perceived patient reluctance to engage in care); organizational (e.g., limited encounter time); and community or policy impediments (e.g., state decisional capacity laws) to patient-centered care. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians perceived individual physician-patient interactions were the greatest facilitators or barriers to patient-centered care. Efforts to increase primary care patient-centeredness for complex or high-risk patients with multimorbidity could focus on targeting physician-patient communication and reducing interpersonal conflict. Springer International Publishing 2022-05-23 2022-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9126696/ /pubmed/35606644 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07533-1 Text en © This is a U.S. government work and not under copyright protection in the U.S.; foreign copyright protection may apply 2022
spellingShingle Original Research: Qualitative Research
Schuttner, Linnaea
Hockett Sherlock, Stacey
Simons, Carol E.
Johnson, Nicole L.
Wirtz, Elizabeth
Ralston, James D.
Rosland, Ann-Marie
Nelson, Karin
Sayre, George
My Goals Are Not Their Goals: Barriers and Facilitators to Delivery of Patient-Centered Care for Patients with Multimorbidity
title My Goals Are Not Their Goals: Barriers and Facilitators to Delivery of Patient-Centered Care for Patients with Multimorbidity
title_full My Goals Are Not Their Goals: Barriers and Facilitators to Delivery of Patient-Centered Care for Patients with Multimorbidity
title_fullStr My Goals Are Not Their Goals: Barriers and Facilitators to Delivery of Patient-Centered Care for Patients with Multimorbidity
title_full_unstemmed My Goals Are Not Their Goals: Barriers and Facilitators to Delivery of Patient-Centered Care for Patients with Multimorbidity
title_short My Goals Are Not Their Goals: Barriers and Facilitators to Delivery of Patient-Centered Care for Patients with Multimorbidity
title_sort my goals are not their goals: barriers and facilitators to delivery of patient-centered care for patients with multimorbidity
topic Original Research: Qualitative Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9126696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35606644
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07533-1
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