Easier Said Than Done: Healthcare Professionals' Barriers to the Provision of Patient-Centered Primary Care to Patients with Multimorbidity.
Sanne Jannick KuipersAnna Petra NieboerJane M CrammPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2021)
Patient-centered care (PCC) has the potential to entail tailored primary care delivery according to the needs of patients with multimorbidity (two or more co-existing chronic conditions). To make primary care for these patients more patient centered, insight on healthcare professionals' perceived PCC implementation barriers is needed. In this study, healthcare professionals' perceived barriers to primary PCC delivery to patients with multimorbidity were investigated using a constructivist qualitative design based on semi-structured interviews with nine general and nurse practitioners from seven general practices in the Netherlands. Purposive sampling was used, and the interview content was analyzed to generate themes representing experienced barriers. Barriers were identified in all eight PCC dimensions (patient preferences, information and education, access to care, physical comfort, emotional support, family and friends, continuity and transition, and coordination of care). They include difficulties achieving mutual understanding between patients and healthcare professionals, professionals' lack of training and education in new skills, data protection laws that impede adequate documentation and information sharing, time pressure, and conflicting financial incentives. These barriers pose true challenges to effective, sustainable PCC implementation at the patient, organizational, and national levels. Further improvement of primary care delivery to patients with multimorbidity is needed to overcome these barriers.
Keyphrases
- primary care
- healthcare
- quality improvement
- palliative care
- end stage renal disease
- general practice
- physical activity
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- mental health
- depressive symptoms
- chronic kidney disease
- social support
- case report
- systematic review
- health information
- machine learning
- smoking cessation
- electronic health record
- chronic pain
- social media
- big data
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- patient reported
- single molecule