Author:
Jeon Yun-Hee,Jowsey Tanisha,Yen Laurann,Glasgow Nicholas J.,Essue Beverley,Kljakovic Marjan,Pearce-Brown Carmen,Mirzaei Masoud,Usherwood Tim,Jan Stephen,Kraus Stefan G.,Aspin Clive
Abstract
The increasing prevalence of chronic disease is a driver of health system reform in most economically advanced nations. A consistent theme within these reforms is building greater patient-centredness into the health care delivery. This study aims to develop an in-depth understanding of the experience of patients and family carers affected by chronic illness that will be the basis on which to propose policy and health system interventions that are patient-centred. Participants struggled with the ongoing tasks of balancing their lives with the increasing demands and intrusion of chronic illness. Their attempts to achieve a balance were seriously hampered by fragmented services, complexity in navigating health services, relationships with health professionals and others, and co-morbidity. Future policy directions include designing models of care and infrastructure that enable patients and their family carers to balance life and illness, and aligning patient-centred care not only within health services but also with community and social support services.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy
Cited by
62 articles.
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