TY - JOUR
T1 - A Learning Loop Model of Collaborative Decision-Making in Chronic Illness
AU - Ronis, Sarah D.
AU - Kleinman, Lawrence C.
AU - Stange, Kurt C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Academic Pediatric Association
PY - 2019/7
Y1 - 2019/7
N2 - Shared decision-making is a core attribute of quality health care that has proved challenging to implement and assess in pediatric practice. Current models of shared decision-making are limited, including their capacity to incorporate multiple stakeholders; to integrate downstream effects of subacute or minor decisions; and to account for the context(s) in which such decisions are being made and enacted. Based on a review of literature from organizational psychology, cognitive sciences, business, and medicine, we propose an iterative decision-making model of care planning and identify targets at several levels of influence warranting measurement in future studies. Our learning loop model posits the relationship between pediatric patients, their parents, and their clinicians as central to the collaborative decision-making process in the setting of chronic illness. The model incorporates the evolution of both context and developmental capacity over time. It suggests that “meta-learning” from the experience of and outcomes from iterative decision is a key factor that may influence relationships and thus continued engagement in collaboration by patients, their parents, and their clinicians. We consider the model in light of the needs of children with special health care needs, for whom understanding the ongoing iterative effects of decision making and clinician−parent−child dynamics are likely to be particularly important in influencing outcomes.
AB - Shared decision-making is a core attribute of quality health care that has proved challenging to implement and assess in pediatric practice. Current models of shared decision-making are limited, including their capacity to incorporate multiple stakeholders; to integrate downstream effects of subacute or minor decisions; and to account for the context(s) in which such decisions are being made and enacted. Based on a review of literature from organizational psychology, cognitive sciences, business, and medicine, we propose an iterative decision-making model of care planning and identify targets at several levels of influence warranting measurement in future studies. Our learning loop model posits the relationship between pediatric patients, their parents, and their clinicians as central to the collaborative decision-making process in the setting of chronic illness. The model incorporates the evolution of both context and developmental capacity over time. It suggests that “meta-learning” from the experience of and outcomes from iterative decision is a key factor that may influence relationships and thus continued engagement in collaboration by patients, their parents, and their clinicians. We consider the model in light of the needs of children with special health care needs, for whom understanding the ongoing iterative effects of decision making and clinician−parent−child dynamics are likely to be particularly important in influencing outcomes.
KW - care planning
KW - children with special health care needs
KW - collaborative decision-making
KW - doctor−patient relationship
KW - family-centered care
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85066093529
U2 - 10.1016/j.acap.2019.04.006
DO - 10.1016/j.acap.2019.04.006
M3 - Article
C2 - 31009759
AN - SCOPUS:85066093529
SN - 1876-2859
VL - 19
SP - 497
EP - 503
JO - Academic Pediatrics
JF - Academic Pediatrics
IS - 5
ER -