Abstract

Patient participation and the environment are critical factors in achieving qualitative healthcare. We conducted a systematic scoping review using Arksey and O’Malley’s framework to identify instruments intended to measure patient participation. We assessed those instruments’ characteristics, which areas of the healthcare continuum they target, and whether environmental factors are considered. Instruments were considered eligible if they represented the patient perspective and measured patient participation in healthcare. The search was limited to articles written in English and published in the last 10 years. We extracted concepts (i.e., patient empowerment, patient participation, and patient-centeredness) based on the framework developed by Castro et al. and outcomes of significance regarding the review questions and specific objectives. The search was conducted in PsycINFO, CINHAL/EBSCO, and PubMed in September 2019 and July 2020. Of 4802 potential titles, 67 studies reported on a total of 45 instruments that met the inclusion criteria for this review. The concept of patient participation was represented most often in these studies. Although some considered the social environment, no instrument was found to incorporate and address the physical environment. Thirteen instruments were generic and the remaining instruments were intended for specific diagnoses or healthcare contexts. Our work is the first to study instruments from this perspective, and we conclude that there is a lack of instruments that measure aspects of the social and physical environment coherently as part of patient participation.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutralPatient participation is a key component of person-centered care and the quality of health and social care [1,2,3]

  • This paper reviewed the available instruments aiming to measure patient participation in healthcare with a specific focus on the related concepts and how environmental factors are considered

  • Given the lack of consensus regarding the definition of patient participation, our study followed Castro and colleagues [32] and attempted to treat the concept broadly and included other related concepts

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Summary

Introduction

Patient participation is a key component of person-centered care and the quality of health and social care [1,2,3]. In person-centered care, a service must provide patients with greater decision-making power and more choices and integrate the environment and patients’ unique physical, psychosocial, cultural, and emotional needs [4]. Patient participation has been shown to improve motivation, treatment commitment, and self-management among persons living with chronic conditions [8,9,10]. Current healthcare services use a range of strategies to evaluate the participation of patients and their significant others which are important for the purpose of continuous improvements [11]. Despite its growing significance, patient participation has been poorly implemented in practice and the concept has been vaguely defined [14]

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