Person-Partnered Care: Information Package for Healthcare Providers

Introduction

The Shift to Person-Partnered Care:

Person-Partnered Care (PPC) is not a new trend but an essential paradigm shift.

Unlike traditional healthcare models where patients are passive recipients of care, in the PPC approach, patients actively collaborate with healthcare providers in decision-making and treatment plans. It’s about treating patients as equal partners, valuing their unique insights, and addressing their holistic needs.

Importance for Clinics

Why is this critical for base clinics?

CAF members face unique challenges, and their care should reflect that.

Service members and their families/designated care partners often face challenges such as relocations, deployments, and the stresses of military life. A PPC approach is crucial to address these specific needs, ensuring that care is not only medically appropriate but also contextually relevant.

Core Principles

  1. Accountability: Every individual, regardless of rank or role, is accountable to others, fostering strong working relationships.
  2. Responsiveness: Proactively identifying, acknowledging, and responding to needs, trends, and system changes.
  3. Respect and Dignity: Ensuring every interaction is grounded in mutual respect and dignity to support engagement.
  4. Belonging: Creating a culture of inclusion for all members and their families.
  5. Participation and Collaboration: Supporting unified and collective goals to achieve successful outcomes through shared spaces.
  6. Openness and Information Sharing: Transparent sharing of information connected to decision-making processes.

Role of Healthcare Providers

Healthcare providers are not just caregivers, but also collaborators.

Healthcare providers play a pivotal role in making this model successful. It’s not enough to just provide medical advice. It’s about listening actively, understanding individual patient concerns, and working together to create the best care plan.

Effective Communication Techniques

Open dialogue is the most potent tool.

In PPC, effective communication is key. It involves actively listening, avoiding medical jargon, and ensuring that patients fully understand their conditions and treatment options. Feedback loops are also crucial – always encourage patients to voice their concerns or ask questions.

Engaging family & designated care partners

  1. Recognizing the importance of family in care decisions
  2. Facilitating family consultations
  3. Collaborating with base MFRCs & CFMWS for support services
  4. Address concerns and needs of family/designated care partners

Care does not end with the individual. Their support network is an extension of their care environment.

By involving family and designated care partners in the care process, you can ensure that patients have a solid support network, which can significantly impact recovery and overall well-being.

Mapping patient journey

Continuous learning and feedback

Patient feedback is the compass that will help point us on the path to successfully implementing PPC across CAF. The journey in PPC will be evolving.

To ensure the success of this model, healthcare providers must commit to ongoing learning and evolution. Regular feedback sessions with patients, their families (and with the Quality Standard Committees) will ensure sustained collaboration and exchange of information.

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