Advancing Patient and Family Engagement: Developing a “Guide to Patient and Family Engagement in Healthcare Quality and Safety ?in the Hospital Setting”

CAPS partnering with organizations with experience in and commitment to patient and family engagement, hospital quality, and safety.

Chicago, IL, December 1, 2009 — Improving the quality and safety of healthcare in the United States is one of the most significant challenges facing the American healthcare system today. A critical step on the path toward safer, higher quality care is encouraging and facilitating patient and family engagement to improve healthcare experiences, care delivery, and outcomes.

In September 2009, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) awarded a 3-year contract to a team of organizations to develop, evaluate, and implement a Guide to Patient and Family Engagement (the Guide) to promote patient and family engagement in hospital settings.

Led by the American Institutes for Research (AIR), the team working on this project is an unparalleled collaboration of partners with experience in and commitment to patient and family engagement, hospital quality, and safety. In addition to AIR, the team includes Carilion Health Clinic, Consumers Advancing Patient Safety (CAPS), the Institute for Family-Centered Care (IFCC), the Joint Commission, and the Health Research and Education Trust (HRET). Other organizations contributing to the project include Planetree, the Maryland Patient Safety Center (MPSC), and Aurora Health Care.

What are the goals of this project? The purpose of this project is to build a guide that will help patients, families, and health professionals in the hospital support one another to improve quality and safety. This project aims to build and expand on existing efforts to facilitate patient and family engagement through the creation of evidence-based guidance and tools that will create a foundation for culture change.

Specific tasks for this project include:

Developing a Patient and Family Hospital Engagement Guide. The Guide is broadly conceived of as tools, materials, and/or training for patients, families, hospital clinicians and staff, hospital leaders, and those who will implement the Guide. The tools in the Guide will support the involvement of patients and family members in their care, encourage the involvement of patients and family members in improving quality and safety, facilitate the creation of partnerships between health professionals and patients, and outline the steps needed to implement changes.

Implementing and pilot testing the Guide. To ensure that the Guide is feasible to implement, effective, and accepted by patients, family members, and health professionals, we will conduct both short- and longer-term implementations of the Guide in several diverse hospital settings.

Assessing the impact of the Guide on key outcomes of interest. We will evaluate how implementation of the Guide affects key outcomes, including: patient/family involvement in their own healthcare; patient/family involvement in quality improvement and patient safety activities; patient and staff satisfaction; organizational culture with respect to patient-centered care; and hospital policies and practices. We also will use the evaluation to understand implementation challenges and facilitators and to inform revisions to the Guide.

Disseminating the Guide. To ensure that hospitals, the public, and patients and families will benefit from this Guide, we will identify and implement methods and strategies to promote the Guide, including identification and outreach to distribution partners.