Patient-centered care in chronic disease management: A thematic analysis of the literature in family medicine. Hudon, C., Fortin, M., Haggerty, J., Loignon, C., Lambert, M., & Poitras, M. Patient Education and Counseling, 88(2):170–176, August, 2012.
Patient-centered care in chronic disease management: A thematic analysis of the literature in family medicine [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Objective The objective was to provide a synthesis of the results of the research and discourse lines on main dimensions of patient-centered care in the context of chronic disease management in family medicine, building on Stewart et al.’s model. Methods We developed search strategies for the Medline, Embase, and Cochrane databases, from 1980 to April 2009. All articles addressing patient-centered care in the context of chronic disease management in family medicine were included. A thematic analysis was performed using mixed codification, based on Stewart's model of patient-centered care. Results Thirty-two articles were included. Six major themes emerged: (1) starting from the patient's situation; (2) legitimizing the illness experience; (3) acknowledging the patient's expertise; (4) offering realistic hope; (5) developing an ongoing partnership; (6) providing advocacy for the patient in the health care system. Conclusion The context of chronic disease management brings forward new dimensions of patient-centered care such as legitimizing the illness experience, acknowledging patient expertise, offering hope and providing advocacy. Practice implications Chronic disease management calls for the adaptation of the family physician's role to patients’ fluctuating needs. Literature also suggests the involvement of the family physician in care transitions as a component of patient-centered care.
@article{hudon_patient-centered_2012,
	title = {Patient-centered care in chronic disease management: {A} thematic analysis of the literature in family medicine},
	volume = {88},
	issn = {0738-3991},
	url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0738399112000407},
	doi = {10.1016/j.pec.2012.01.009},
	abstract = {Objective
The objective was to provide a synthesis of the results of the research and discourse lines on main dimensions of patient-centered care in the context of chronic disease management in family medicine, building on Stewart et al.’s model.
Methods
We developed search strategies for the Medline, Embase, and Cochrane databases, from 1980 to April 2009. All articles addressing patient-centered care in the context of chronic disease management in family medicine were included. A thematic analysis was performed using mixed codification, based on Stewart's model of patient-centered care.
Results
Thirty-two articles were included. Six major themes emerged: (1) starting from the patient's situation; (2) legitimizing the illness experience; (3) acknowledging the patient's expertise; (4) offering realistic hope; (5) developing an ongoing partnership; (6) providing advocacy for the patient in the health care system.
Conclusion
The context of chronic disease management brings forward new dimensions of patient-centered care such as legitimizing the illness experience, acknowledging patient expertise, offering hope and providing advocacy.
Practice implications
Chronic disease management calls for the adaptation of the family physician's role to patients’ fluctuating needs. Literature also suggests the involvement of the family physician in care transitions as a component of patient-centered care.},
	number = {2},
	journal = {Patient Education and Counseling},
	author = {Hudon, Catherine and Fortin, Martin and Haggerty, Jeannie and Loignon, Christine and Lambert, Mireille and Poitras, Marie-Eve},
	month = aug,
	year = {2012},
	keywords = {Chronic diseases, Family Practice, Patient-Centered Care, Primary Health Care},
	pages = {170--176},
}

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