Showing posts with label Paul Gallant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Gallant. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 November 2013

Patient's Role in Healthcare

I participated in a tweetchat a few weeks ago about an upcoming 2-day conference that occurred in October. It was called the "Second Summit for Sustainable Health and Healthcare" and put on by the Conference Board of Canada.

As the chat went on I looked up the meeting agenda and saw no patients included; however today when I checked again to confirm my impression there was one! Dr. Sholom Glouberman, the President of Patients Canada, was the moderator of a panel called "From Beginning To End - Patient Centered Care". He certainly has credibility with patients after his years with the organization now called Patients Canada. 
From PatientsCanada #conf2013

The topic of sustainable health and healthcare ought to be deeply interesting to anyone who is ever a patient. Not only is everybody in need of care at some points of their lives, we are also the source of the funding.  Patients are the major stakeholders in healthcare.

Most of the people at conferences are in the healthcare field or involved in a health-related business. They are not penalized by loss of income when they attend job-related events. 

It is difficult for patients who are not affiliated with health organizations to pay high registration fees, and to take time off work to attend, yet I believe it is important to include them in conferences in ways that are affordable. 

Here's a link to a terrific post by Leslie Kernisan, MD Patients Not Included where she talks about patient inclusion and the MedX experience. She makes her points so well.

There are ways to help include patients to attend health events -- such as scholarships as offered by Stanford MedX, or Mayo Transform. Reduced admission fees or free admission as offered by some European conferences would also help patients to stay informed and engaged.

In social media we see a lot of discussion about the move to include patients in conferences and change initiatives.  As Paul Gallant of HealthWorksBCsaid during #cbochealth chat “Our health system is profoundly undemocratic. That needs to change.”

We need informed and health-literate consumers to be involved in healthcare to help to make it sustainable. 

I agree with Lucien Engelen when he says leaving patients out is just like people at your work having a big meeting about you...without you.

The movement to include patients as stakeholder partners is more evident in Europe and the US than in Canada. 

heritage-history.com

Patient engagement is said to be the Holy Grail of healthcare – the equivalent of a blockbuster drug. Highly-engaged well-informed patients cost the healthcare system less money and tend to influence other patients towards better health.

Patients want to share, collaborate and co-operate. They want to transfer the knowledge they have gained through years of coping with health problems.

Patients need to be involved.  Doctor’s visits take at most two hours a year in total for people of moderate health. The rest of the time we are on our own. Self management is becoming essential to keep the focus on health, not treatment, especially in chronic disease.

Things work more smoothly and economically when patients know more and understand the system .

Also, patient involvement can trigger ‘aha moments’ for HCPs (Health Care Practitioners)

Changes in paternalistic attitudes may help to change patient behaviours and to empower and activate patients to spread what they learn rapidly and effectively, often 
through social media.

Patients are good at helping others cope with the small stuff in health care.  I wrote a post giving tips about injecting biologic drugs last March. It had more than 1,000 hits in one week alone. People value that form of narrative information. 

What do we do to increase the number of active patients? That's a question needs an effective answer.