Login / Signup

Measures used to assess interventions for increasing patient involvement in Danish healthcare setting: a rapid review.

Bente Skovsby ToftLotte RodkjaerAnne Bendix AndersenAnnette de ThurahBerit NielsenCamilla Palmhøj NielsenJens Thusgård HørlückLisbeth KallestrupLiv Marit Valen SchougaardMette Spliid LudvigsenMette Terp HoybyeTrine EllegaardHilary Bekker
Published in: BMJ open (2022)
Across Denmark, complex interventions designed to improve patient involvement with healthcare vary in their goals and content. Some targeting healthcare professionals, some patient health literacy and some service infrastructure. A plethora of measures assess the impact of these interventions on patient, professional and service delivery outcomes. Few measures assessed patient involvement directly, and it is unclear which proxy measures capture indicators of perceived involvement. Lack of conceptual clarity between intervention goals, the components of change and measures makes it difficult to see what types of intervention can best support change in services to ensure patients are more effectively involved in their healthcare.
Keyphrases