Coming full circle (to hard questions): Patient- and family-centered care in the hospital context.

Roughly 60 years after the first questions were raised about hospitalized patients, Kaslow and colleagues (see record 2020-40858-010) articulate the importance of patient- and family-centered care and outline recommendations for hospitalist care teams. They concisely point out the need for such practices, but more important, they provide many practical examples. Some of the main recommendations include (a) form partnerships, (b) prioritize communication, (c) discuss care goals, (d) share decision-making, (e) collaborate to implement the treatment plan, (f) negotiate differences, and (g) make special accommodations for discharge planning. Within each of these areas, the authors provide specific patient-centered and family-focused practices. At a global level, none of the recommendations provided are unique to hospitalists’ practice. Almost all of them are similar to patient- and family-centered care recommendations from other settings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved)
Source: Families, Systems, and Health - Category: International Medicine & Public Health Source Type: research