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Fertilizing a Patient Engagement Ecosystem to Innovate Healthcare: Toward the First Italian Consensus Conference on Patient Engagement

Authors :
Guendalina Graffigna
Serena Barello
Giuseppe Riva
Mariarosaria Savarese
Julia Menichetti
Gianluca Castelnuovo
Massimo Corbo
Alessandra Tzannis
Antonio Aglione
Donato Bettega
Anna Bertoni
Sarah Bigi
Daniela Bruttomesso
Claudia Carzaniga
Laura Del Campo
Silvia Donato
Silvia Gilardi
Chiara Guglielmetti
Michele Gulizia
Mara Lastretti
Valeria Mastrilli
Antonino Mazzone
Giovanni Muttillo
Silvia Ostuzzi
Gianluca Perseghin
Natalia Piana
Giuliana Pitacco
Gianluca Polvani
Massimo Pozzi
Livio Provenzi
Giulia Quaglini
Mariagrazia Rossi
Paola Varese
Natalia Visalli
Elena Vegni
Walter Ricciardi
A. Claudio Bosio
Source :
Frontiers in Psychology, Vol 8 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2017.

Abstract

Currently we observe a gap between theory and practices of patient engagement. If both scholars and health practitioners do agree on the urgency to realize patient engagement, no shared guidelines exist so far to orient clinical practice. Despite a supportive policy context, progress to achieve greater patient engagement is patchy and slow and often concentrated at the level of policy regulation without dialoguing with practitioners from the clinical field as well as patients and families. Though individual clinicians, care teams and health organizations may be interested and deeply committed to engage patients and family members in the medical course, they may lack clarity about how to achieve this goal. This contributes to a wide “system” inertia—really difficult to be overcome—and put at risk any form of innovation in this filed. As a result, patient engagement risk today to be a buzz words, rather than a real guidance for practice. To make the field clearer, we promoted an Italian Consensus Conference on Patient Engagement (ICCPE) in order to set the ground for drafting recommendations for the provision of effective patient engagement interventions. The ICCPE will conclude in June 2017. This document reports on the preliminary phases of this process. In the paper, we advise the importance of “fertilizing a patient engagement ecosystem”: an oversimplifying approach to patient engagement promotion appears the result of a common illusion. Patient “disengagement” is a symptom that needs a more holistic and complex approach to solve its underlined causes. Preliminary principles to promote a patient engagement ecosystem are provided in the paper.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16641078
Volume :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.39b35e97ae7b4f0899286f111079be71
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00812