View a recording of this webinar here: https://www.healthcatalyst.com/webinar/the-patients-power-in-improving-health-and-care/
Around the globe, we are facing a trifecta of healthcare challenges: financial constraints, an aging population, and an increased burden of chronic disease. We need to turn healthcare upside down, empowering our patients to take action for their health and helping physicians, nurses, and healthcare professionals move from being sages to guides.
Patients, even those with chronic diseases, only spend a few hours each year with a doctor or a nurse, while they spend thousands of hours making personal choices around eating, exercise, and other activities that impact their health. How can we get patients to be more engaged in their care, and help physicians, nurses, and healthcare providers transition from a paradigm of “what’s the matter” to “what matters to you”?
Through her work at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), Maureen Bisognano has worked diligently to support the IHI Triple Aim: improving the experience of patient care, improving the health of populations, and lowering costs. In this webinar she will present stories of patients and healthcare organizations that are partnering together with tools, processes, data, and systems of accountability to move from dis-ease to health-ease.
In this webinar you will learn:
- Lessons from the “flipped school” in the education system and how they can be successfully applied in healthcare to improve patient behavior.
- How increased patient engagement can help to improve healthcare outcomes and deliver a better care experience while reducing costs.
- Ways that technology can effectively improve data capture, patient accountability, and decision-making.
- The impactful stories of four patients who became innovators in their own care.
improve data capture, patient accountability, and decision-making.
7. What’s the matter?
7
What matters to you?
Source: Barry MJ, Edgman-Levitan S. ”Shared Decision Making – The Pinnacle
of Patient-Centered Care.” N Engl J Med. 366;9. pp 780-782