Patient-Centered Care for Women: Delphi Consensus on Evidence-Derived Recommendations [Editor's Choice]

Aug 1, 2020, 00:00
10.1016/j.jval.2020.03.017
https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/article/S1098-3015(20)32103-3/fulltext
Title : Patient-Centered Care for Women: Delphi Consensus on Evidence-Derived Recommendations [Editor's Choice]
Citation : https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/action/showCitFormats?pii=S1098-3015(20)32103-3&doi=10.1016/j.jval.2020.03.017
First page : 1012
Section Title : HEALTH POLICY ANALYSIS
Open access? : Yes
Section Order : 1012

Objective

Patient-centered care (PCC) could reduce gender inequities in quality of care. Little is known about how to implement patient-centered care for women (PCCW). We aimed to generate consensus recommendations for achieving PCCW.

Methods

We used a 2-round Delphi technique. Panelists included 21 women of varied age, ethnicity, education, and urban/rural residence; and 21 health professionals with PCC or women’s health expertise. Panelists rated recommendations, derived from prior research and organized by a 6-domain PCC framework, on a 7-point Likert scale in an online survey. We used summary statistics to report response frequencies and defined consensus as when ≥85% panelists chose 5 to 7.

Results

The response rate was 100%. In round 1, women and professionals retained 46 (97.9%) and 42 (89.4%) of 47 initial recommendations, respectively. The round 2 survey included 6 recommendations for women and 5 recommendations for professionals (did not achieve consensus in round 1 or were newly suggested). In round 2, women retained 2 of 6 recommendations and professionals retained 3 of 5 recommendations. Overall, 49 recommendations were generated. Both groups agreed on 44 (94.0%) recommendations (13 retained by 100% of both women and clinicians): fostering patient-physician relationship (n = 11), exchanging information (n = 10), responding to emotions (n = 4), managing uncertainty (n = 5), making decisions (n = 8), and enabling patient self-management (n = 6).

Conclusion

The recommendations represent the range of PCC domains, are based on evidence from primary research, and reflect high concordance between women and professional panelists. They can inform the development of policies, guidelines, programs, and performance measures that foster PCCW.

Categories :
  • Health Disparities & Equity
  • Health Policy & Regulatory
  • Health Service Delivery & Process of Care
  • Quality of Care Measurement
  • Study Approaches
  • Surveys & Expert Panels
Tags :
  • consensus recommendations
  • Delphi technique
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