Abstract

BackgroundA rare disease is a pattern of symptoms that afflicts less than five in 10,000 patients. However, as about 6,000 different rare disease patterns exist, they still have significant epidemiological relevance. We focus on rare diseases that affect multiple organs and thus demand that multidisciplinary healthcare professionals (HCPs) work together. In this context, standardized healthcare processes and concepts are mainly lacking, and a deficit of knowledge induces uncertainty and ambiguity. As such, individualized solutions for each patient are needed. This necessitates an intensive level of innovative individual behavior and thus, adequate idea generation. The final implementation of new healthcare concepts requires the integration of the expertise of all healthcare team members, including that of the patients. Therefore, knowledge sharing between HCPs and shared decision making between HCPs and patients are important. The objective of this study is to assess the contribution of shared communication and decision-making processes in patient-centered healthcare teams to the generation of innovative concepts and consequently to improvements in patient satisfaction.MethodsA theoretical framework covering interaction processes and explorative outcomes, and using patient satisfaction as a measure for operational performance, was developed based on healthcare management, innovation, and social science literature. This theoretical framework forms the basis for a three-phase, mixed-method study. Exploratory phase I will first involve collecting qualitative data to detect central interaction barriers within healthcare teams. The results are related back to theory, and testable hypotheses will be derived. Phase II then comprises the testing of hypotheses through a quantitative survey of patients and their HCPs in six different rare disease patterns. For each of the six diseases, the sample should comprise an average of 30 patients with six HCP per patient-centered healthcare team. Finally, in phase III, qualitative data will be generated via semi-structured telephone interviews with patients to gain a deeper understanding of the communication processes and initiatives that generate innovative solutions.DiscussionThe findings of this proposed study will help to elucidate the necessity of individualized innovative solutions for patients with rare diseases. Therefore, this study will pinpoint the primary interaction and communication processes in multidisciplinary teams, as well as the required interplay between exploratory outcomes and operational performance. Hence, this study will provide healthcare institutions and HCPs with results and information essential for elaborating and implementing individual care solutions through the establishment of appropriate interaction and communication structures and processes within patient-centered healthcare teams.

Highlights

  • A rare disease is a pattern of symptoms that afflicts less than five in 10,000 patients

  • Our study focuses on two different communication processes, knowledge sharing between healthcare professionals (HCPs) and shared decision making between HCPs and patients

  • Based on the above-mentioned assumptions, this study aims to test the following hypotheses concerning the impact on patient satisfaction of knowledge sharing and shared decision making mediated by innovative behavior of individual HCPs operating under uncertain conditions in multidisciplinary teams: Hypothesis 1: Knowledge sharing between HCPs in patient-centered teams positively influences innovative behavior

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Summary

Introduction

A rare disease is a pattern of symptoms that afflicts less than five in 10,000 patients. Multidisciplinary healthcare teams, diverse in education and function, are tasked with creating new, individual, patient-centered solutions to improving patients’ long-term healthcare situation. We define this necessary innovative behavior of healthcare providers (HCPs) as the intensity of proactive behavior and improvisation to find adequate individualized solutions for each patient and to implement new processes, products, or procedures to enhance medical outcomes. In addition to the emerging incremental adaptations of current healthcare processes, initiatives and new solutions for medical products and procedures arise that have to be transferred to other HCPs. To cope with the complexity of rare diseases, idea generation and implementation both require the integration all team members’ expertise, including that of the patient.

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