Showing posts with label patient experience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patient experience. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 August 2015

The Authentic Patient Voice


The language of patient engagement is starting to concern me. On Twitter #PatientsIncluded is the only patient hashtag that has not been taken and 'professionalized' by hospitals and institutions as their own. 

Patient Experience, Patient Engagement, Patient Relations - all those terms have been turned into hospital silos of professionalism. If you want to call yourself a Patient Navigator you'd better think again. You might be confused with hospital or health system navigators. How about Patient Advocate? - Nope, it's taken. (see below)

"The Department of Patient Advocacy is made up of professionals from various health care backgrounds who possess a wide range of skills and expertise." from a hospital website

"If you are in an Ontario public hospital, you will have access to an in-hospital Patient Advocate through the Patient Relations Department."

If you are a patient then, one who is active and engaged, you don't actually have any term that you can apply to yourself which has not been appropriated. How can patients form a culture when every new term they apply to themselves is quickly co-opted?

There are books to help these professionals too, for example...

A Patient-Centered Approach to Handling Complaints and Grievances... to assist Patient Advocates in managing grievances and complaints more effectively in their organizations.

And courses

"Recognize and understand the key concepts for gathering and using patient experience to design health care improvements"

Keep the term "using patient experience" in mind.

Just last week I saw mid stream results from a project I was involved in. Patients and caregivers did in depth phone interviews including creative pictures to make points about the good and bad in a healthcare issue. A few weeks later the consulting company invited 'selected interviewees' to come in for the final two hours of what had been a day long work group. The consultants, along with their clients, had taken the consultant-chosen ideas and insights and made them into prototypes of solutions. The people who arrived late in the day saw the proposed ideas and were asked for input which the presenters tried to include in presentations immediately after.

As we left we were told that we would see these new initiatives in October, and we would likely recognize our input. It was unsatisfying that they used our ideas to create their version of the patient/caregiver experience, and will be able say "Of course we had patient/caregiver input."

This is not an isolated issue. In a Tweetchat my comment that I am a "third cousin twice removed" of the healthcare system got a large response. It's funny, but the truth in it was what made people laugh.


With PaCER patients are fully engaged in all stages of research

Despite my complaints there are exceptions where there is enthusiasm for the patient movement and the authentic patient voice - The PaCER course in Calgary, which now has a satellite in Ontario is one of those, and I couldn't have asked for more enthusiasm than I received when I contacted the Ontario SPOR Support Unit. 



What I am ranting about is the way in which patients are being streamed into advisory sub committees, the way we are being used as tokens and to help tick off the right box, and the way that the large "disease organizations" have corporatized our voices.

Where is the attitude that patients are part of the team in healthcare, that we are partners? Why are we always asked to participate inside a pre-determined frame?
When will we see co-design of new policies, and ultimately co-production?

Could this be connected to the embarrassing fact that patients can work as hard as anyone else in the health professions, and yet they are the only ones at the table with no badge, and who are not being rewarded for their efforts? Some are quite willing to volunteer indefinitely, and enjoy the process, and yet they still have to make their own way to learn what they need to know.

There are no development courses for patients who want to be active influencers. There are few conferences where they can make connections and learn about up-to-date research, not to mention the lack of access to medical journals that are behind paywalls. The whole health infrastructure is supported by patients as the major stakeholders and yet it is difficult for us to access enough information to fully participate.

We need to support the journey from passive patient to patient leader. 




Wednesday, 26 November 2014

Patient Safety in Hospitals. Could Patients Help?

When I returned from the Medicine X Conference at Stanford I felt empowered as a patient. Meeting so many people with healthcare ideals that were similar to mine made me feel as though anything was possible. Once I got back I saw an invitation for patients to attend this year's Patient Experience Conference. That was one in the "win" column - last year in social media there were complaints about the same conference for having no patients in the room. This year the policy changed, in part due to sponsors I'm told.

Yet in hospitals as a patient I often don't feel like the advocate I am. I don't feel empowered - I do what I'm told to do. I would like to see a forum or some route for input into the Safety and Infection Control practices, but though I read the newsletter, newspapers, emails and even the signs posted looking for volunteers for mental health, depression, bone health, migraines etc, I see no way to join any discussion of safety and infection control in a particular institution.


As an example of an issue, the idea of walking barefoot on a hospital floor would not seem healthy to many people and yet I am asked to do that regularly. It's an ingrained habit not to rock the boat. Friends in my online group relate similar experiences, like Julie's at her hospital, when the CT tech wanted her to lie down on a sheet that did not look clean. She felt like taking a dirty sheet in to them with a footprint on it and then a clean sheet to show. the difference.

I would argue that no one is perfect, and that try as they do, the infection control committees could use input from patients who sit there sometimes for hours on end observing what is going on around them and worrying.

There are many more examples now of hospitals listening to patients and those are steps in the right direction but I would like to see them all on similar paths.





Saturday, 8 February 2014

Do You Have a Health or Patient Advocate?

This is the blog for #hcsmca chat being held on Wednesday February 12, 2014 at 1:00pm est. You can see the post at the #hcsmca site . Natrice (@NatriceR) and I are co-moderators. 

By Annette McKinnon and Natrice Rese

We used the discussion from the January 22, 2014 #hcsmca chat with Christine Spencer and Emily Nicholas (@Emily_Nicholas8) from @PatientsCanada as our starting point. That chat concerned the risks and benefits of patients sharing their stories online. We talked about the power and value of the patient narrative.  

After the chat, we (Natrice and I)wondered: Why did the recognized value of the patient narrative not translate into patient influence in healthcare?


  • The patient narrative is informed by patient experience.
  • If the patient story is so powerful why do patients still have no voice?

We started to think about Ann Landers and moved on to the way bloggers are a lot like newspaper advice columnists, but for very specialized audiences. This led to a series of questions that helped us find our topic.
1. Who or what do patients and caregivers use to find out what they need to know, beyond the basics of the diagnosis, to help them figure out the intricacies of healthcare in chronic disease, aging, serious illness, dying, etc.?

2. We say patients and caregivers need an Ann Landers. Who do we/you choose to fulfill this function?

3 A patient navigator may be ideal as a co-captain or designated decision maker of your team? (An ePatient wants to collaborate so we chose the term "co-captain.")

4. How do patient navigators get recognition, and hence inclusion? How can patient navigators best support their family member?

5. With respect to patient voice: Why does it feel like them vs us when we attempt to learn the ropes? Where is (or how do we empower) our personal Ann Landers today?


6. Kingston General Hospital has a patient committee giving valuable input to every aspect of patient care - Is this happening in other hospitals and facilities?
 Here are two articles that inspired us:
Advocacy For Parents/Ontario Seniors by Jennifer A. Jilks (@jennjilks)
On Breaking One's Neck by Arnold Relman


Re: On Breaking One's Neck 
Arnold Relman, a 92 year old surgeon, had 3 doctors and 3 lawyers in his family. Despite having a whole team of advocates and good access since he was the ultimate "insider", Arnold still had issues and needed advocates.
Excerpt
"What is important is that someone who knows the patient oversees their care, ensures that the many specialized services work together in the patient’s interest, and that the patient [or their advocate *] is kept fully involved and informed."
We added the phrase "or their advocate"

So for February 12th's #hcsmca chat we propose the following topics about the importance of patient narrative.
1.  What is your definition of a patient advocate?

2. Can you share an example of the benefits of having an advocate ?

3. How have social media groups like #hcsmca changed  the patient experience ?




Read the transcript of the chat. (added Feb 12)