Fostering Patient-Centered Equitable Care in Radiology: AJR Expert Panel Narrative Review.
Anand K NarayanRandy C MilesArissa MiltonGloria SalazarLucy B SpallutoKemi BabagbemiJustin T StowellEfren J FloresFarouk DakoIan A WeissmanPublished in: AJR. American journal of roentgenology (2023)
Patient-centered care (PCC) and equity are two of the six core domains of quality health care, according to the Institute of Medicine. Exceptional imaging care requires radiology practices to provide patient-centered (respectful and responsive to individual patient preferences, needs, and values) and equitable (does not vary in quality based on gender, ethnicity, geographic location, or socioeconomic status) care. Specific barriers that prevent the delivery of patient-centered, equitable care include information gaps, breaches of trust, organizational medical culture, and financial incentives. Information gaps limit practitioners from understanding the lived experience of patients. Breaches of trust prevent patients from seeking needed medical care. Organizational medical cultures may not be centered around patient experiences. Financial incentives can impede practitioners' ability to spend the time and resources required to meet patient goals and needs. Intentional approaches that integrate core principles in both PCC and health equity are required to deliver high-quality patient-centered imaging care for diverse patient populations. The purpose of this AJR Expert Panel Narrative Review is to review the origins of the PCC movement in radiology, characterize connections between the PCC and health equity movements, and describe concrete examples of ways to foster patient-centered equitable care in radiology.
Keyphrases
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- palliative care
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- affordable care act
- mental health
- artificial intelligence
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- chronic kidney disease
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