TY - JOUR
T1 - Building patient participation in quality of care through the healthcare stories project
T2 - A demonstration program in New York State HIV clinics
AU - Baim-Lance, Abigail
AU - Coren, Freda
AU - Brown, Margaret
AU - Lever, Hazel
AU - Tietz, Daniel
AU - Agins, Bruce
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to acknowledge each of the HCSP participating clinics' patients and staff who took part in the activities and the evaluation. We would particularly like to thank the Brooklyn Hospital PATH Center for graciously providing their word cloud. We would also like to deeply thank Michele Canfield for her excellent design work on the HCSP materials, and the NYS Department of Health statewide Consumer Advisory Committee for their active engagement with this initiative. This paper is dedicated to the memory of Humberto Cruz, former AIDS Institute Director, and champion of advancing coproduction with the PLWHA community.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2021. Published in association with The Beryl Institute.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - There is growing recognition that patients should play a central role in defining, assessing, and improving the quality of healthcare, thereby enhancing patient experiences. Healthcare organizations struggle to meet these goals, which require becoming more patient-centered and patient-involved. The Healthcare Stories Project (HCSP), a demonstration program of the NYS Department of Health AIDS Institute, aimed to address this. HCSP comprises three, stepwise activities to: 1) Capture how patients define and experience 'quality of care' in the clinic; 2) Engage patients and providers as equal partners in understanding and improving the quality of care; and through partnerships, 3) Support the building of a coproduced healthcare system. After reviewing HCSP and its rollout in New York HIV outpatient settings, we describe a qualitative process evaluation, consisting of interviews at two time points with implementing organizations (N=12, 11). Each activity offered an opportunity to share ideas and experiences of quality of care, generating concrete improvement project ideas. Activities strengthened patient involvement by engaging consumer advisory boards, and staff not traditionally involved in quality. While designed to be implemented with HIV patients, organizations implemented Activity Two and Three with broader populations. Organizations had the hardest time implementing Activity Three that focused on the coproduction concept, but they none the less applied and strengthened coproduced healthcare during Activities One and Two. Overall, HCSP is a promising model to advance patient-centered and patient-partnered quality of care, better understanding patient experiences and acting with patients to develop practical improvements and a more coproduced healthcare system.
AB - There is growing recognition that patients should play a central role in defining, assessing, and improving the quality of healthcare, thereby enhancing patient experiences. Healthcare organizations struggle to meet these goals, which require becoming more patient-centered and patient-involved. The Healthcare Stories Project (HCSP), a demonstration program of the NYS Department of Health AIDS Institute, aimed to address this. HCSP comprises three, stepwise activities to: 1) Capture how patients define and experience 'quality of care' in the clinic; 2) Engage patients and providers as equal partners in understanding and improving the quality of care; and through partnerships, 3) Support the building of a coproduced healthcare system. After reviewing HCSP and its rollout in New York HIV outpatient settings, we describe a qualitative process evaluation, consisting of interviews at two time points with implementing organizations (N=12, 11). Each activity offered an opportunity to share ideas and experiences of quality of care, generating concrete improvement project ideas. Activities strengthened patient involvement by engaging consumer advisory boards, and staff not traditionally involved in quality. While designed to be implemented with HIV patients, organizations implemented Activity Two and Three with broader populations. Organizations had the hardest time implementing Activity Three that focused on the coproduction concept, but they none the less applied and strengthened coproduced healthcare during Activities One and Two. Overall, HCSP is a promising model to advance patient-centered and patient-partnered quality of care, better understanding patient experiences and acting with patients to develop practical improvements and a more coproduced healthcare system.
KW - HIV/AIDS
KW - Patient experience
KW - coproduction
KW - culture
KW - interactions
KW - patient involvement
KW - person-centeredness
KW - quality improvement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85147344825&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.35680/2372-0247.1552
DO - 10.35680/2372-0247.1552
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85147344825
SN - 2372-0247
VL - 8
SP - 84
EP - 93
JO - Patient Experience Journal
JF - Patient Experience Journal
IS - 2
ER -