4.7 Article

Patient-centeredness in the multimorbid elderly: a focus group study

Journal

BMC GERIATRICS
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12877-021-02448-8

Keywords

Patient-centeredness; Focus group; Older patients; Multimorbidity; Chronic disease

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [U1111-1205-6873]
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG)
  3. Albert-Ludwigs-University of Freiburg
  4. Projekt DEAL

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Older patients with multimorbidity have a positive view towards patient-centered care, and the integrative PC model's dimensions are confirmed for this specific population. When targeting this population, some dimensions will be complemented.
Background: Patient-centeredness (PC) aims to adapt health care to the individual needs and preferences of patients. An existing integrative model of PC comprises several dimensions of PC which have not yet been investigated from the patients' perspective. Older patients with multimorbidity represent a target group for patient-centered care, as their care needs are particularly complex and should be addressed individually. We aimed to assess the perspective that older patients with multimorbidity have of patient-centered care and to examine the transferability of the integrative model of PC to this specific population. Method: We performed 4 guided focus group interviews with a total of 20 older individuals with multimorbidity. The focus group interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. Patients' statements were content-analyzed applying an a priori designed system of categories that included the dimensions of PC from the integrative model and the additional category 'prognosis and life expectancy', which had emerged from an initial literature search on aspects of PC specific to the multimorbid elderly. Results: The new category 'prognosis and life expectancy' was confirmed and expanded to 'individual care needs related to aging and chronic disesase'. All dimensions of our integrative PC model were confirmed for older patients with multimorbidity. Among these, we found that eight dimensions (individual care needs related to aging and chronic disease, biopsychosocial perspective, clinician-patient communication, essential characteristics of the clinician, clinician-patient-relationship, involvement of family and friends, coordination and continuity of care, access to care) were complemented by aspects specific to this target population. Conclusions: The integrative PC model is applicable to the population of older patients with multimorbidity. For a population-specific adaptation, it might be complemented by the dimension 'individual care needs in aging and chronic disease', in conjunction with age-specific aspects within existing dimensions. Together with corresponding results from a Delphi survey, our adapted PC model will serve as the basis for a subsequent systematic review of instruments measuring PC in older patients with multimorbidity.

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