Considering Patients’ Empowerment in Chronic Care Management: A Cross-Level Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Macro Level
It [the patient’s care trajectory] is not predetermined, because patients who have the same medical status can have different ambitions: staying independent and being able to keep traveling or to look after their kids or … The starting point is what the patient wants … and is able to do, obviously. […] The part about empowerment can also motivate them to seek treatment or look for what could motivate them to seek treatment.(High-ranking public official, 2017)
Forcing the patient to do something which does not correspond to what he/she wants would risk not being effective and, as a result, [would lead to] compliance problems regarding the treatment and unnecessary waste.(High-ranking public official, 2017)
3.2. Meso Level
Even after suffering from his embolism and myocardial infarction, there was no awareness of its severity or … Eating was his only… his only pleasure. Therefore, psychologically speaking … even involving psychologists … other providers… Well, he’s not a manageable person.(GP about his 60-year-old patient)
I’ll take my coffee, a cup of coffee; I won’t drink it without sugar. If I have to add sweetener, I find it doesn’t taste the same. Well, in the evening, I’ll take the sweetener if my children are there. That’s really a small detail, isn’t it?(70-year-old woman with diabetes and hypertension)
I agree to make all the efforts required, but … but not to sit all day long while waiting for the day to end. To be allowed to do something, to have little pleasures and eat this or do that and … Except for walking, she (the diabetologist) doesn’t allow me to do anything, you see… […] It’s too much, you know. No, I can’t!(70-year-old woman with diabetes and hypertension)
At this time, we had Glucophage [metformin]. Because I was a sales representative, I was annoyed. It gave me gas, and as I was frequently … I stopped taking this drug. So, each time there was a blood test, they said: “But did you take it …?” “Yes, yes, no problem!” So they increased the amount to take. And I didn’t take it.(60-year-old man with diabetes)
Obviously, there are some people I will never give this kind of tool to! Because… well, because they don’t have the brains to cope with it. Clearly. It is … it requires a little judgment to understand and think about.(50-year-old GP)
3.3. Micro Level
We have to be flexible. While we have already gone through the disease, we have already experienced the disease in our body, then we have to get used to this new “me”, to this new body, to all these limits, but at the same time, we have to adapt to people’s new behaviors, to how people perceive us, to those changing attitudes, and all those changes around us… […] And I would say that adapting to oneself is not the most complicated thing; it’s mostly adapting to others.(48-year-old woman, breast cancer survivor)
I had the feeling of being considered as a medical statistic.
I don’t want to be seen as a victim by other people, or someone who always complains about his situation. I can take care of myself.(59-year-old man, head and neck cancer survivor)
4. Discussion
Patient empowerment is a very complex and paradoxical concept: it is situated at several levels (macro, meso, micro), can be approached on several perspectives (the patient, the health care provider, or the health care system) that lead to different interpretations (a theory, a process, an intervention, an outcome, a feeling, or a paradigm) and surfaces in several areas (e.g., (mental) health and welfare) and disciplines (psychology, sociology, nursing, social work). Different definitions, each with a different emphasis, are consequently in use.(p. 1925)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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School and Level | Research Question/Aim of the Study | Perspective on Empowerment | Data Collection |
---|---|---|---|
Social Sciences | Focus on political and organizational governance through the prism of managerial innovation to grasp the whys and wherefores of the ongoing paradigm shift intended to implement integrated care in Belgium. | 1. Definition in the plan | Thematic literature review Operational document analysis Qualitative interviews with policy advisors and public officials involved in devising and implementing the new policy, pilot project coordinators, and pilot project stakeholders Direct field observations Focus groups |
Macro Level | Analysis of the reform design process and the national and international context in which it took place; the rationale for reform; and the specific way the reform was implemented through bottom–up pilot projects. | 2. Vision circulated by the authorities | |
Medicine Meso Level | To better grasp the different implications of situations related to chronic illness as experienced by patients and their family caregivers; in particular, acceptance of the social status of chronically ill people, which conditions the place and role of family caregivers, and the manner in which informal and professional caregivers work together. | Perspective of multimorbid patients in relation to professionals and informal caregivers | Qualitative interviews with “triads” (one patient, one of his/her health professionals, and one of his/her informal caregivers) 23 interviews were conducted and analyzed |
Psychology Micro Level | To better understand how having a chronic illness changes chronic patients’ self-representation and to study the risks and protective factors that impact self-representation in patients with different chronic conditions such as cancer, multiple sclerosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and diabetes. | Perspective of patients stemming from their personal experiences related to their health | Mixed-method study design with qualitative exploratory interviews and scoping research (questionnaires). |
Meaning | Expectations | Reality | |
---|---|---|---|
Macro Level | Definition of the joint plan | Shorter hospital stays Cost reductions | Misunderstandings between stakeholders |
Meso Level | Patient-centered care | Support autonomy Maintain social situation | Collective meaning vs. individual meaning |
Micro Level | Patient participation: being active and sharing decision making | Foster patients’ involvement Hear patients’ voices and rights | Disruptions in terms of representations and roles |
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Tilkin, C.; De Winter, M.; Ketterer, F.; Etienne, A.-M.; Vanmeerbeek, M.; Schoenaers, F. Considering Patients’ Empowerment in Chronic Care Management: A Cross-Level Approach. Eur. J. Investig. Health Psychol. Educ. 2020, 10, 134-142. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe10010012
Tilkin C, De Winter M, Ketterer F, Etienne A-M, Vanmeerbeek M, Schoenaers F. Considering Patients’ Empowerment in Chronic Care Management: A Cross-Level Approach. European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education. 2020; 10(1):134-142. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe10010012
Chicago/Turabian StyleTilkin, Caroline, Mélanie De Winter, Frédéric Ketterer, Anne-Marie Etienne, Marc Vanmeerbeek, and Frédéric Schoenaers. 2020. "Considering Patients’ Empowerment in Chronic Care Management: A Cross-Level Approach" European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education 10, no. 1: 134-142. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe10010012
APA StyleTilkin, C., De Winter, M., Ketterer, F., Etienne, A.-M., Vanmeerbeek, M., & Schoenaers, F. (2020). Considering Patients’ Empowerment in Chronic Care Management: A Cross-Level Approach. European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education, 10(1), 134-142. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe10010012