Patient engagement at the margins: Health care providers' assessments of engagement and the structural determinants of health in the safety-net

被引:54
|
作者
Fleming, Mark D. [1 ,2 ]
Shim, Janet K. [3 ]
Yen, Irene H. [4 ]
Thompson-Lastad, Ariana [3 ]
Rubin, Sara [3 ]
Van Natta, Meredith [3 ]
Burke, Nancy J. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Anthropol Hist & Social Med, 3333 Calif St,Suite 485, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[2] Univ Calif, Sch Social Sci Humanities & Arts, Publ Hlth, 5200 North Lake Rd, Merced, CA 95343 USA
[3] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Social & Behav Sci, 3333 Calif St,Suite 455, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[4] Univ Calif San Francisco, Div Gen Internal Med, Dept Med, 3333 Calif St,Suite 335, San Francisco, CA 94118 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
United States; Patient engagement; Poverty; Health inequalities; Safety-net; Super utilizers; ACCOUNTABLE CARE;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.04.028
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Increasing "patient engagement" has become a priority for health care organizations and policy-makers seeking to reduce cost and improve the quality of care. While concepts of patient engagement have proliferated rapidly across health care settings, little is known about how health care providers make use of these concepts in clinical practice. This paper uses 20 months of ethnographic and interview research carried out from 2015 to 2016 to explore how health care providers working at two public, urban, safety-net hospitals in the United States define, discuss, and assess patient engagement. We investigate how health care providers describe engagement for high cost patients-the "super-utilizers" of the health care system-who often face complex challenges related to socioeconomic marginalization including poverty, housing insecurity, exposure to violence and trauma, cognitive and mental health issues, and substance use. The health care providers in our study faced institutional pressure to assess patient engagement and to direct care towards engaged patients. However, providers considered such assessments to be highly challenging and oftentimes inaccurate, particularly because they understood low patient engagement to be the result of difficult socioeconomic conditions. Providers tried to navigate the demand to assess patient engagement in care by looking for explicit positive and negative indicators of engagement, while also being sensitive to more subtle and intuitive signs of engagement for marginalized patients. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:11 / 18
页数:8
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