connectedness and continuity: a prescription for patient engagement

Post on 16-Apr-2017

302 views 2 download

transcript

blueshieldcafoundation.org Feb. 25, 2013

connectedness and continuity:a prescription for patient engagement

Institute of Medicine Roundtable on Value & Science-Driven Health CareWashington, DC.

Presenter:Gary LangerLanger Research Associatesglanger@langerresearch.com

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 2

BSCF research programchanging health care paradigm for low-income Californians• ACA introduces competition; providers will need to respond

spring 2011: baseline survey of healthcare experiences and preferences • establish drivers of patient loyalty

two drill-downs emerge:• expressed desire for a regular personal doctor• substantial resistance to shared decision making

spring 2012: explore these and other potential drivers of patient empowerment and engagement

blueshieldcafoundation.org

connectedness and continuityWhat patients say they want…

… a regular personal doctor

What patients mean they want…

….connectedness (a sense someone there “knows you pretty well”)

…and continuity (an assurance you’ll see the same caregiver over time)

page 3

blueshieldcafoundation.org

the impactWanting but lacking a personal doctor independently (negatively)

predicts satisfaction with care and patient loyalty…

But when connectedness and continuity are added to the equation, they independently (positively) predict satisfaction, empowerment and engagement alike – and having a regular personal doctor does not

page 4

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 5

shared decision making

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 6

shared decision making

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 7

leveling the playing fieldpreference for an equal say

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 8

the path to patient-centered care:a model of empowerment and

engagement

blueshieldcafoundation.org

confident you can make healthcare decisions

provider usually explains things in a way you understand

comfortable asking provider questions

feel informed about your health

a model of patient engagementbased on results from the 2012 BSCF survey of low-income Californians

page 9

connectedness

continuityengagement

empowerment:

blueshieldcafoundation.org

connectedness and information

page 10

connectedness

continuityengagement

comfortable asking provider questions

provider usually explains things in a way you understand

confident you can make healthcare decisions

feel informed about your health

empowerment:

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 11

the impact of connectednesson feeling informed about one’s health

among low-income Californians with a personal connection

among low-income Californians who lack a personal connection

blueshieldcafoundation.org

continuity and information

page 12

connectedness

continuityengagement

comfortable asking provider questions

provider usually explains things in a way you understand

confident you can make healthcare decisions

feel informed about your health

Empowerment:

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 13

the impact of continuityon feeling informed about one’s health

among those who usually see the same provider

among those who see the same provider less often

blueshieldcafoundation.org

connectedness and further empowerment

page 14

connectedness

continuityengagement

comfortable asking provider questions

provider usually explains things in a way you understand

confident you can make healthcare decisions

feel informed about your health

empowerment:

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 15

the impact of connectedness on further empowerment measures

blueshieldcafoundation.org

continuity and further empowerment

page 16

connectedness

continuityengagement

comfortable asking provider questions

provider usually explains things in a way you understand

confident you can make healthcare decisions

feel informed about your health

empowerment:

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 17

the impact of continuity on further empowerment measures

blueshieldcafoundation.org

the importance of information

page 18

connectedness

continuityengagement

comfortable asking provider questions

provider usually explains things in a way you understand

confident you can make healthcare decisions

feel informed about your health

empowerment:

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 19

the impact of information on other empowerment measures

blueshieldcafoundation.org

empowerment and engagement

page 20

connectedness

continuityengagement

comfortable asking provider questions

provider usually explains things in a way you understand

confident you can make healthcare decisions

feel informed about your health

empowerment:

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 21

empowerment and engagement% who report having a great deal of say in their care

yes yes yes yesno no no novery informed? very comfortable

asking questions?

always understand provider?

very confident can make HC

decisions?

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 22

one route: team-based care

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 23

58% 56% 52%47% 46% 42%

satisfaction withcare

very informed abouthealth

always understandproviders' instructions

among those who have team-based careamong those who do not have team-based care

the impact of team-based care

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 24

team care II

blueshieldcafoundation.orgpage 25

Rx for patient engagement

connectedness and continuity pave the path to patient empowerment and engagementinformation is essential;• it predicts self-efficacy even when connectedness and continuity are held

constant• …and it does so more strongly than education, income, gender, race and other

demographic variables

blueshieldcafoundation.org

and a word on measurement(inspired by our literature reviews)

• attitudinal measurements in non-probability samples are not generalizable •aapor task force report (2010)

• agree/disagree and yes/no questions are inherently biasing•Saris et al., Survey Research Methods (2010) 4/1: 61-79

• unlabeled or partially labeled number scales often lack internal validity•Krosnick & Fabrigar, Sociological Methods & Research (2009)

 37: 393-425

• knowledge is problematic to measure in an opinion survey format•challenges are cognitive, measurement-based and definitional

• data analysis is enriched by rigorous statistical modelingpage 26

blueshieldcafoundation.org

thank you!Institute of Medicine Roundtable on Value & Science-Driven Health CareWashington, DC.

Presenter:Gary LangerLanger Research Associatesglanger@langerresearch.com