Patient-centered Medicine and Self-help Groups in Germany. “Self-help friendliness” as an approach for enhancing patient involvement in health care institutions.

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Patient-centered Medicine and Self-help Groups in Germany. “Self-help friendliness” as an approach for enhancing patient involvement in health care institutions. / Trojan, Alf; Kofahl, Christopher; Nickel, Stefan.

Patient Centered Medicine. Hrsg. / Omur Sayligil. 1. Aufl. InTechOpen, 2017. S. 97-118 5.

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@inbook{3ec1498e95ba49b4ad1c50bbf79ee18e,
title = "Patient-centered Medicine and Self-help Groups in Germany. “Self-help friendliness” as an approach for enhancing patient involvement in health care institutions.",
abstract = "Collaboration between laypersons and professionals is closely linked to the concept of patient centeredness. Patient centeredness means meeting the needs of individual patients as well as reacting to patients{\textquoteright} demands on the collective level. The support of self-help groups and their integration into healthcare institutions represent a major policy approach to fulfilling this requirement. Here, we first deal with the concept of patient centeredness in general, and the concept{\textquoteright}s understanding and use in Germany. We also provide a short definition of self-help friendliness (SHF) and discuss the success achieved in implementing it in Germany so far. We then clarify the closely related concepts of patient centeredness, patient participation, patient involvement and self-help friendliness. The latter is seen as a strategy for increasing both patient centeredness and patient participation in healthcare services. We subsequently describe the involvement of self-help groups and patient associations in a series of empirical studies and practice-oriented projects carried out between 2004 and 2013 with the purpose of developing SHF. The last section contains a general discussion of the advantages and shortcomings of the SHF approach as a means of systematically increasing sustainable patient centeredness and patient participation in healthcare services. Finally we address the chances for future development in Germany and the transferability of SHF to other countries.Keywords: self-help friendliness, self-help groups, patient centeredness, patient involvement, patient associations, healthcare institutions, healthcare research",
author = "Alf Trojan and Christopher Kofahl and Stefan Nickel",
year = "2017",
month = apr,
day = "12",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-953-51-2991-2",
pages = "97--118",
editor = "Omur Sayligil",
booktitle = "Patient Centered Medicine",
publisher = "InTechOpen",
edition = "1",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Patient-centered Medicine and Self-help Groups in Germany. “Self-help friendliness” as an approach for enhancing patient involvement in health care institutions.

AU - Trojan, Alf

AU - Kofahl, Christopher

AU - Nickel, Stefan

PY - 2017/4/12

Y1 - 2017/4/12

N2 - Collaboration between laypersons and professionals is closely linked to the concept of patient centeredness. Patient centeredness means meeting the needs of individual patients as well as reacting to patients’ demands on the collective level. The support of self-help groups and their integration into healthcare institutions represent a major policy approach to fulfilling this requirement. Here, we first deal with the concept of patient centeredness in general, and the concept’s understanding and use in Germany. We also provide a short definition of self-help friendliness (SHF) and discuss the success achieved in implementing it in Germany so far. We then clarify the closely related concepts of patient centeredness, patient participation, patient involvement and self-help friendliness. The latter is seen as a strategy for increasing both patient centeredness and patient participation in healthcare services. We subsequently describe the involvement of self-help groups and patient associations in a series of empirical studies and practice-oriented projects carried out between 2004 and 2013 with the purpose of developing SHF. The last section contains a general discussion of the advantages and shortcomings of the SHF approach as a means of systematically increasing sustainable patient centeredness and patient participation in healthcare services. Finally we address the chances for future development in Germany and the transferability of SHF to other countries.Keywords: self-help friendliness, self-help groups, patient centeredness, patient involvement, patient associations, healthcare institutions, healthcare research

AB - Collaboration between laypersons and professionals is closely linked to the concept of patient centeredness. Patient centeredness means meeting the needs of individual patients as well as reacting to patients’ demands on the collective level. The support of self-help groups and their integration into healthcare institutions represent a major policy approach to fulfilling this requirement. Here, we first deal with the concept of patient centeredness in general, and the concept’s understanding and use in Germany. We also provide a short definition of self-help friendliness (SHF) and discuss the success achieved in implementing it in Germany so far. We then clarify the closely related concepts of patient centeredness, patient participation, patient involvement and self-help friendliness. The latter is seen as a strategy for increasing both patient centeredness and patient participation in healthcare services. We subsequently describe the involvement of self-help groups and patient associations in a series of empirical studies and practice-oriented projects carried out between 2004 and 2013 with the purpose of developing SHF. The last section contains a general discussion of the advantages and shortcomings of the SHF approach as a means of systematically increasing sustainable patient centeredness and patient participation in healthcare services. Finally we address the chances for future development in Germany and the transferability of SHF to other countries.Keywords: self-help friendliness, self-help groups, patient centeredness, patient involvement, patient associations, healthcare institutions, healthcare research

M3 - SCORING: Contribution to collected editions/anthologies

SN - 978-953-51-2991-2

SP - 97

EP - 118

BT - Patient Centered Medicine

A2 - Sayligil, Omur

PB - InTechOpen

ER -