Assessment of patient-centred care and its impact on health care quality: a multicentred prospective cohort study
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BACKGROUND
For several decades now, a "patient-centred" clinical approach has been used in
primary care consultations. However, although an integrative model of the concept
has been established, it still lacks conceptual clarity and there is a great deal of
divergence in its assessment so most of the instruments value only part of the
principles on which “Patient-Centred Care” is based. This leads to heterogeneous
results in terms of the effectiveness of patient-centred interventions and, above all,
to the difficulty of applying patient-centred care by medical professionals.
OBJECTIVES
The aim of this study is to objectively determine which medical professionals provide
patient-centred care (PCC) and which do not using tools that assess PCC. And, once
this has been determined, compare the adherence to treatment and the results of
the clinical parameters in chronic pathologies (High Blood Pressure, Type 2 Diabetes
Mellitus and Respiratory disease), the adequacy of treatment in acute pathologies
(acute urinary tract infection, acute low back pain and acute pharyngitis and
tonsillitis) and patient satisfaction (randomly selected) for 1 year between both
groups.
DESIGN
It is a multicentric prospective cohort study. Based on the analysis of clinical
interviews at doctor-patient appointments by external observers, two groups will be
formed: professionals who provide "patient-centred care" and professionals who do
not. Once the two groups have been divided, each consisting of 49 medical
professionals, the results obtained by doctors, in relation to the patients and their
pathologies, on different variables will be analysed over the course of one year. The
variables analysed will be adherence to treatment and clinical parameters in chronic
pathologies, adequacy to treatment in acute pathologies and patient satisfaction in
randomised patients for each doctor (...)