Keynotes - Joanne Greenhalgh and Bradi B. Granger Passed
Thursday May 16, 2024 08:30 - 09:30 G3
Key-note speakers: Bradi Granger, Joanne Greenhalgh
Moderator: Hanna Gyllensten
Track: Keynotes and Awards
Joanne Greenhalgh
PhD, Professor
Affiliation(s)
Professor of Applied Social Research Methodology, School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Leeds. President of International Society for Quality of Life Research (ISOQOL).
Title
Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) and patient centred care: It aint what you do, it’s the way that you do it
Abstract
In this talk I will examine the relationship between the feedback of Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) to clinicians and patients and patient centred care. I will briefly review what we understand by ‘patient centred care’, though this concept probably needs little introduction to the audience of this conference. I’ll then introduce PROMs, for those who may be unfamiliar with them. I will outline the ideas and assumptions about how the feedback of PROMs to clinicians and patients are intended to realise patient centred care. I’ll also consider some of counter ideas and concerns about these claims and briefly consider sociological literature on power in the clinician-patient relationship. I’ll examine the empirical evidence on whether and how PROMs feedback can support patient centred care and situate the findings in the critical data studies literature and the ethics and philosophy of measurement. The moral of this presentation is that it is not whether but how PROMs are implemented and used that shapes whether and how they support patient centred care. As the saying goes, it aint (just) what you do, its (also) the way that you do it.
Bradi B. Granger
Professor
Affiliation(s)
Professor, Duke University School of Nursing
Director, Duke Heart Nursing Research Program, Duke-Margolis Health Policy Center
Title
Advancing Person Centered Models of Care in a Value-Based System: What Will It Take?
Abstract
Person-centered models of care are defined broadly as the ways in which health services are delivered for individuals and populations experiencing various stages of health and illness. Ideally, care models focus on patients’ needs and incorporate the social, environmental, spiritual, and financial resources that a person brings into care planning. The goal being to ensure that people receive “the right care, at the right time, by the right team and in the right place.”
In US healthcare, a major challenge underpinning person-centered care delivery is the current payment system, which remains largely fee-for-service rather than value-based reimbursement. These payment models fail to reimburse health care systems or clinicians for longitudinal care, leading to uncoordinated, fragmented, and low-quality care.
This session presents a practical framework demonstrating evidence that health care organizations can accomplish person-centered care delivery across diverse settings. This framework was developed in collaboration with the American Heart Association and the Margolis Institute for Health Policy at Duke University.
We highlight barriers to implementing measurable, person-centered components of care into clinical practice and provide strategies to overcome those barriers, focusing on strategies that can be implemented across settings, especially low-resource and community-based practices representing broad social, economic,and geographic diversity.
Seminar type
Pre-recorded + On-site
Lecture type
Keynote
Conference
GCPCC
Lecturers
Bradi Granger Key-note speaker
Duke University Health System & School of Nursing
Dr. Granger is a Professor at the Duke University School of Nursing, the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy, and Director of the Duke Heart Center Nursing Research Program.
Her research is focused on health system and health policy support for cardiovascular person-centered care. Specific foci of research include health equity, health behaviors and self-management, medication use in chronic illness, and strategies to facilitate safe care transitions across settings of care, from hospital to home and community-based settings.
Dr. Granger has published and lectured extensively, both nationally and internationally, on methods and interventions for person-centered medication management in complex chronic illness.
As a mentor to clinicians and students, she has led a number of team-based studies in the field of cardiovascular care resulting in publications and featured work in Journal of the American Medical Association, the American Heart Journal, the Journal of Advanced Nursing, Patient Education and Counseling, the Lancet, the European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, and others.
Joanne Greenhalgh Key-note speaker
University of Leeds
Joanne Greenhalgh is a Professor of Applied Social Research Methodology at the School of Sociology and Social Policy and President [or Past President from October 2023] of the International Society for Quality of Life Research. Her research has focused on exploring how the routine collection of patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) improves patient care. Joanne also has expertise in realist methods and was part of the RAMESES team that developed quality and reporting standards and resources and training materials for realist evaluation.
Hanna Gyllensten Moderator
Associate professor
University of Gothenburg
About
Hanna is a registered pharmacist with a background in community pharmacy and as a ward pharmacist. She is PhD (Medicine) since 2014 and her thesis was exploring the economic impact of drug-related morbidity, including e.g., adverse drug reactions and sub-therapeutic effects of drug therapy. Hanna is now a senior lecturer at University of Gothenburg, and Associated professor in health care sciences.
She is leading one of the three focus areas within GPCC; directed towards development, adaptation and evaluation of person-centred care. In that role she is responsible for on one of the centers strategic initiatives towards governance for person-centred care, and leads the research group examining health economic aspects of person-centred care.
Research
Hannas research focuses on health economic aspects of, in particular, chronic diseases. Examples are economic evaluations of person-centred interventions in healthcare, based on data collected within clinical trials and complemented by data from national and regional registers. Her other research projects include mainly (register-based) observational research. The studies uses national registers, sometimes complemented by data from population survey or collected from medical records, to study e.g., societal costs resulting from disease.