Who Said What Now and How? Evaluating Saskatchewan's Patient-Reported Measures in Primary Care

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Titel: Who Said What Now and How? Evaluating Saskatchewan's Patient-Reported Measures in Primary Care
Autoren: Carr, Tracey, Andreas, Brenda, Skrapek, Candace, King, Margaret, Groot, Gary, Spock, Taylor, Cole, Cathy, Plishka, Christopher, Fang, Sarah
Quelle: International Journal of Integrated Care; Vol. 25 No. S2 (2025): North America Conference on Integrated Care, Calgary, Canada – 15-17 October 2024; 166 ; 1568-4156
Verlagsinformationen: Ubiquity Press
Publikationsjahr: 2025
Bestand: International Journal of Integrated Care (IJIC)
Beschreibung: Background: A team of patient partners, researchers, and health system collaborators evaluated the pilot implementation of patient reported metrics in primary care health networks in Saskatchewan, Canada with the intent to recommend best practices for provincial scale-up. Approach: The Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) is responsible for health services in Saskatchewan, Canada, including the delivery of primary care services across 38 health networks. Health networks are intended to connect teams of healthcare professionals and community partners to meet the needs of the people they serve. To ensure that the health system delivers care that matters to patients, the People Centred Measurement (PCM) working group, an SHA, patient, and health system partner collaboration, was established in 2020. In November 2022, the PCM working group launched an initiative called Integrating Patient Reported Data into Health Networks in Saskatchewan For this pilot project, an online survey was developed and implemented in 4 of 38 health networks to gather patient reports of their primary care experiences. University of Saskatchewan (USask) researchers and three patient partners who were embedded in the PCM working group engaged in a developmental evaluation of the pilot initiative to recommend policy options to scale up the implementation of patient reported data across Saskatchewan health networks. Working alongside the principal knowledge user who was the PCM working group director and a collaborator who led the development and implementation of the survey, one USask researcher attended all health network meetings and offered evaluative feedback in real time. Early in the evaluation, the researchers and patient partners produced an initial report suggesting the need to increase patient partner engagement and the limitations of a survey approach to the collection of patient reported experiences. Given the PCM imperative to implement patient reported measurement using the survey, the research team was encouraged to engage in a ...
Publikationsart: article in journal/newspaper
Dateibeschreibung: application/pdf
Sprache: English
Relation: https://account.ijic.org/index.php/up-j-ijic/article/view/10077/10886
DOI: 10.5334/ijic.NACIC24166
Verfügbarkeit: https://account.ijic.org/index.php/up-j-ijic/article/view/10077
https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.NACIC24166
Rights: Copyright (c) 2025 The Author(s) ; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
Dokumentencode: edsbas.783533B6
Datenbank: BASE
Beschreibung
Abstract:Background: A team of patient partners, researchers, and health system collaborators evaluated the pilot implementation of patient reported metrics in primary care health networks in Saskatchewan, Canada with the intent to recommend best practices for provincial scale-up. Approach: The Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) is responsible for health services in Saskatchewan, Canada, including the delivery of primary care services across 38 health networks. Health networks are intended to connect teams of healthcare professionals and community partners to meet the needs of the people they serve. To ensure that the health system delivers care that matters to patients, the People Centred Measurement (PCM) working group, an SHA, patient, and health system partner collaboration, was established in 2020. In November 2022, the PCM working group launched an initiative called Integrating Patient Reported Data into Health Networks in Saskatchewan For this pilot project, an online survey was developed and implemented in 4 of 38 health networks to gather patient reports of their primary care experiences. University of Saskatchewan (USask) researchers and three patient partners who were embedded in the PCM working group engaged in a developmental evaluation of the pilot initiative to recommend policy options to scale up the implementation of patient reported data across Saskatchewan health networks. Working alongside the principal knowledge user who was the PCM working group director and a collaborator who led the development and implementation of the survey, one USask researcher attended all health network meetings and offered evaluative feedback in real time. Early in the evaluation, the researchers and patient partners produced an initial report suggesting the need to increase patient partner engagement and the limitations of a survey approach to the collection of patient reported experiences. Given the PCM imperative to implement patient reported measurement using the survey, the research team was encouraged to engage in a ...
DOI:10.5334/ijic.NACIC24166