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Multi-level strategies to tailor patient-centred care for women: qualitative interviews with clinicians
- Source :
- BMC Health Services Research, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2020), BMC Health Services Research
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- BMC, 2020.
-
Abstract
- Background Patient-centered care (PCC) is one approach for ameliorating persistent gendered disparities in health care quality, yet no prior research has studied how to achieve patient-centred care for women (PCCW). The purpose of this study was to explore how clinicians deliver PCCW, challenges they face, and the strategies they suggest are needed to support PCCW. Methods We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews (25–60 min) with clinicians. Thirty-seven clinicians representing 7 specialties (family physicians, cardiologists, cardiac surgeons, obstetricians/gynecologist, psychiatrists, nurses, social workers) who manage depression (n = 16), cardiovascular disease (n = 11) and contraceptive counseling (n = 10), conditions that affect women across the lifespan. We used constant comparative analysis to inductively analyze transcripts, mapped themes to a 6-domain PCC conceptual framework to interpret findings, and complied with qualitative research reporting standards. Results Clinicians said that women don’t always communicate their health concerns and physicians sometimes disregard women’s health concerns, warranting unique PCC approaches.. Clinicians described 39 approaches they used to tailor PCC for women across 6 PCC domains: foster a healing relationship, exchange information, address emotions/concerns, manage uncertainty, make decisions, and enable self-management. Additional conditions that facilitated PCCW were: privacy, access to female clinicians, accommodating children through onsite facilities, and flexible appointment formats and schedules. Clinicians suggested 7 strategies needed to address barriers of PCCW they identified at the: patient-level (online appointments, transport to health services, use of patient partners to plan and/or deliver services), clinician-level (medical training and continuing professional development in PCC and women’s health), and system-level (funding models for longer appointment times, multidisciplinary teamwork to address all PCC domains). Conclusions Our research revealed numerous strategies that clinicians can use to optimize PCCW, and health care managers and policy-makers can use to support PCCW through programs and policies. Identified strategies addressed all domains of an established PCC conceptual framework. Future research should evaluate the implementation and impact of these strategies on relevant outcomes such as perceived PCC among women and associated clinical outcomes to prepare for broad scale-up.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Patient-centered care
Health Personnel
media_common.quotation_subject
Health informatics
Health administration
Nursing
women’s health
Gender issues
Health care
Qualitative interviews
medicine
Humans
Qualitative Research
media_common
Professional-patient relations
Teamwork
business.industry
Health Policy
Public health
Nursing research
lcsh:Public aspects of medicine
lcsh:RA1-1270
Women's Health Services
Quality of health care
Female
business
Attitude of health personnel
Research Article
Health care quality
Qualitative research
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 14726963
- Volume :
- 20
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMC Health Services Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7b5762287827b42a03bd0d7e259acc0b
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-020-05082-z