Patient-Centered
Care and Professional
Nursing Practice
Chapter 11
What is Patient-Centered Care (PCC)?
• Care that is respectful of and responsive to
individual patient preferences, needs, and
values and ensuring that patient values guide
all clinical decisions (IOM, 2001)
• Recognizes the patient or designee as the
source of control and full partner in providing
compassionate and coordinated care based on
respect for the patient’s preferences, values,
and needs (QSEN, 2014)
PCC Competency
• The nurse “will provide holistic care that
recognizes an individual’s preferences, values,
and needs and respects the patient or designee
as a full partner in providing compassionate,
coordinated, age and culturally appropriate,
safe and effective care” (Massachusetts
Department of Higher Education, 2010, p. 9)
Dimensions of PCC
• Respect for patients’ values, preferences, and
needs
• Coordination and integration of care
• Information, communication, and education
• Physical comfort
• Emotional support
• Involvement of family and friends
• Transition and continuity
• Access to care
Picker Principles of Patient-
Centered Care
Videos featuring patients “in their own words”
http://cgp.pickerinstitute.org/?page_id=1319
http://cgp.pickerinstitute.org/?page_id=1319
Components of Patient-Centered and
Family-Centered Care Delivery Models
• Coordination of care conference
• Hourly rounding by the nurse
• Bedside report
• Use of patient care partner
• Individualized care established on admission
• Open medical record policy
Components of Patient-Centered and
Family-Centered Care Delivery Models (cont.)
• Eliminating visiting restrictions in relation to
family members
• Allowing family presence with a chaperone
during resuscitation and other invasive
procedures
• Silence and healing environment
Communication as a Strategy to
Support PCC
• Communication is defined as the nurse
interacting “effectively with patients, families,
and colleagues, fostering mutual respect and
shared decision making, to enhance patient
satisfaction and health outcomes”
(Massachusetts Department of Higher
Education [2010], p. 27)
Empathetic Communication
• Behaviors that facilitate empathetic
communication include:
– Listening carefully and reflecting back a
summary of the patient’s concerns
– Using terms and vocabulary appropriate for the
patient
– Calling the patient by his or her preferred name
– Using respectful and professional language
Empathetic Communication (cont.)
• Behaviors that facilitate empathetic
communication include (cont.):
– Asking the patient what they need and
responding promptly to those needs
– Providing helpful information
– Soliciting feedback from the patient
– Using self-disclosure appropriately
– Employing humor as appropriate
– Providing words of comfort when appropriate
Nonempathetic Communication
• Behaviors can also hinder empathetic communication:
– Interrupting the patient with irrelevant information
– Using vocabulary that is either beneath the level of
the patient or not understandable to the patient
– Using language that may be perceived as
patronizing or demeaning
– Using nonprofessional language
Non-Empathetic Communication (cont.)
• Behaviors can also hinder empathetic communication
(cont.):
– Reprimanding or scolding the patient
– Preaching to the patient
– Providing the patient with inappropriate
information
– Asking questions at inappropriate times or giving
patient advice inappropriately
– Self-disclosing inappropriately
Kleinman’s Questions
• What do you think has caused your problem?
• Why do you think it started when it did?
• What do you think your problem does inside
your body?
• How severe is your problem? Will it have a
short or long course?
Kleinman’s Questions (cont.)
• What kind of treatment do you think you
should receive?
• What are the most important results you hope
to receive from this treatment?
• What are the chief problems your illness has
caused you?
• What do you fear most about your
illness/treatment?
Patient Education as a Strategy to
Support PCC
• Patient education is any set of planned
educational activities designed to improve
patients’ health behaviors and/or health status
Learning Domains
• Cognitive learning encompasses the
intellectual skills of knowledge acquisition,
comprehension, application, analysis, and
evaluation
• Psychomotor learning refers to learning skills
and performance of behaviors or skills
• Affective learning requires a change in
feelings, attitudes, or beliefs
Andragogy
• Letting learners know why something is
important to learn
• Showing learners how to direct themselves
through information
• Relating the topic to the learners’ experiences
• Realizing that people will not learn until they
are ready and motivated
Health Belief Model (HBM)
• According to HBM, the likelihood of acting in
response to health threat is dependent upon 6 factors:
– Person’s perception of the severity of the illness
– Person’s perception of susceptibility to the illness
– Value of the treatment benefits
– Barriers to treatment
– Costs of treatment in physical and emotional
terms
– Cues that stimulate taking action toward treatment
of illness
Social Learning Theory
• If a person believes he or she is capable of
performing a behavior (self-efficacy) and also
believes the behavior will lead to a desirable
outcome, the person is more likely to perform
the behavior
Social Learning Theory (cont.)
• Four methods for enhancing efficacy
expectations:
– Performance accomplishments
– Vicarious experience or modeling
– Verbal persuasion
– Interpretation of physiological state
The Patient Education Process
• Assessment
• Planning
• Implementation
• Evaluation
Assessment of Learning Needs
• What information does the patient need?
• What attitudes should be explored?
• What skills does the patient need to know?
• What factors may be barriers?
• Is the patient likely to return home?
• Can the caregiver handle the care?
• Is the home situation appropriate?
• What kinds of assistance will be required?
Other Variables in the Patient
Education Process
• Learning styles
• Readiness to learn
• Health literacy
– “The degree to which individuals have
the capacity to obtain, process, and
understand basic health information and
services they need to make appropriate
health decisions” (IOM, 2004, p. 31)
Ask Me 3™ Questions
• What is my main problem?
• What do I need to do?
• Why is it important for me to do this?
ED/AU: Trademark symbol needed?
Ask Me 3® Video
ACTS
• Assess
• Compare
• Teach 3/Teach back
• Survey
Readability of Written Materials
• Written materials for patients with low health
literacy skills should be fifth grade level or
below
• Several readability formulas are available to
determine the grade level of materials (Flesch,
1948; Fry, 1968; McLaughlin, 1969)
• SMOG formula
Planning
• Nurse responsible for guiding the process through
the use of goals and objectives
• Objectives for patient education are stated as
behavioral objectives
– Performance
– Conditions
– Criteria
• Learning objectives should be specific, measurable,
and attainable
Implementation
• Learning activities need to be consistent with
learning objectives
• Using varied learning activities can make
learning more fun and more effective
– Examples include lecture, demonstration,
practice, games, simulation, role play,
discussion, and self-directed learning
Criteria for Judging Patient
Education Materials
• Material contains the information that the
patient wants
• Material contains the information that the
patient needs
• Patient understands and uses the material as
presented
Patient Education with Older
Adults: Age-Related Barriers
• Cognitive changes:
– Changes in encoding and storage of
information
– Changes in the retrieval of information
– Decreases in the speed of processing
information
Patient Education with Older
Adults: Age-Related Barriers (cont.)
• Visual changes:
– Smaller amount of light reaches the retina
– Reduced ability to focus on close objects
– Scattering of light resulting in glare
– Changes in color perception
– Decrease in depth perception and peripheral
vision
Patient Education with Older
Adults: Age-Related Barriers (cont.)
• Changes in hearing:
– Reduced ability to hear sounds as loudly
– Decrease in hearing acuity
– Decrease in ability to hear high-pitched
sounds
– Decrease in ability to filter background
noise
Strategies to Accommodate for Age-
Related Barriers: Cognitive
• Slow the pace of presentation
• Give smaller amounts of information
• Repeat information frequently
• Reinforce verbal teaching with audiovisuals,
written materials, and practice
• Reduce distractions
• Allow more time for self-expression
Strategies to Accommodate for Age-
Related Barriers: Cognitive (cont.)
• Use analogies and examples from everyday
experience to illustrate abstract information
• Increase meaningfulness of content
• Teach mnemonic devices and imaging
techniques
• Use printed materials and visual aids that are
age specific
Strategies to Accommodate for
Age-Related Barriers: Visual
• Make sure glasses are clean and in place
• Use printed materials with 14- to 16-point font
and serif letters
• Use bold type on printed materials and do not
mix fonts
• Avoid use of dark colors with dark backgrounds
but instead use large, distinct configurations
with high contrast
Strategies to Accommodate for
Age-Related Barriers: Visual (cont.)
• Avoid blue, green, and violet to differentiate
type, illustrations, or graphics
• Use line drawings with high contrast
• Use soft white light to decrease glare
• Light should shine from behind learner
• Use color and touch to help differentiate depth
• Position materials directly in front of learner
Strategies to Accommodate for
Age-Related Barriers: Hearing
• Speak distinctly
• Do not shout
• Speak in a normal voice or lower pitch
• Decrease extraneous noise
• Face person directly while speaking at a distance
of 3 to 6 feet
• Reinforce verbal teaching with visual aids or
easy-to-read materials
Cultural Considerations
• Adapt information to be more specific and use more relevant terminology
• Create descriptions or explanations that fit with different people’s understandings of key concepts
• Incorporate a group’s cultural beliefs and practices into the program content and process
Evaluation
• Measuring the extent to which the patient has
met the learning objectives
• Identifying when there is a need to clarify,
correct, or review information
• Noting learning objectives that are unclear
• Pointing out shortcomings in patient teaching
interventions
• Identifying barriers that prevented learning
Evaluation of PCC
• National Strategy for Quality Improvement
in Health Care priority
• Link between quality and patient satisfaction
• HCAHPS standardized survey
• CAHPS supplemental item sets
Don Berwick What Patient Centred
Care Really Means Video