Power To The Patient: Person-Centred Care And How You Can Take Your Health Into Your Own Hands
Person-centred care (also known as patient-centred care) is the philosophy of giving power back to patients and putting them“at the centre” of care.
It can lead to lower health-care spending and better patient health outcomes . That's why person-centred care has become a top priority in Canada.
As a health services researcher working with an international group of researchers , my goal is to learn more about how person-centred care works and how we can use people's voices and health information to make it happen.
I'm also a person who uses the health-care system, which is why I know it's important for everyone to know what person-centred care is, where it came from and how each of us play a part in building a better health-care system.
What is person-centred care?“Putting patients at the centre” is a really vague goal. That's why your family doctor, pharmacist, physiotherapist and everyone in between probably has different ideas about how to be person-centred. Here are three signs that the care you're getting is person-centred :
Patients were once expected to be passive in their own care. Person-centred care encourages patients to self-monitor, self-care and advocate for themselves. (Shutterstock)
A hundred years ago in the western medical system, patients were expected to be passive. The health-care provider was the knowledge keeper for your body, so you did what they said without question. That's why it was revolutionary when, in the 1950s, psychologists started saying that people can cure their own problems when they get the right support .
In the following decades, other experts (including several influential Canadians ) brought even more ideas, like how patients should be seen as unique human beings . (Indigenous peoples understood this long before colonizers did.)
Three ways to push for person-centred carePerson-centred care has become essential . Especially when it comes to chronic diseases , you need to self-monitor, self-care and advocate for yourself. So what can you do to take your health into your own hands?
Learning about their own conditions and care can empower patients. Libraries, online resources, workshops and service directories can be useful resources. Karolina Grabowska/Pexels
While you might not be able to change the system on your own, always remember that your voice matters.
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