Patient-shared knowledge and information in clinical decision-making: an international survey of the perspectives and experiences of naturopathic practitioners

被引:2
作者
Steel, Amie [1 ]
Brand, Sarah [2 ]
Leach, Matthew [3 ]
Lloyd, Iva [4 ]
Ward, Vicky [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Technol Sydney, Fac Hlth, Australian Res Ctr Complementary & Integrat Med, Sch Publ Hlth, 235-253 Jones St, Ultimo 2006, Australia
[2] Nottingham Univ Hosp NHS Trust, Nottingham, England
[3] Southern Cross Univ, Natl Ctr Naturopath Med, Lismore, Australia
[4] World Naturopath Federat, Toronto, ON, Canada
[5] Univ St Andrews, Sch Management, Res Unit Res Utilisat, St Andrews, Scotland
关键词
Patient-centred care; Shared decision-making; Naturopathy; Knowledge mobilisation; Knowledge translation; CENTERED CARE; HEALTH-CARE; COMPLEMENTARY; FRAMEWORK;
D O I
10.1186/s12906-023-04087-5
中图分类号
R [医药、卫生];
学科分类号
10 ;
摘要
IntroductionMost knowledge translation models pay relatively little attention to patient-held knowledge and are largely based on the premise that researchers and clinicians hold all valuable knowledge, and patients are passive recipients of such knowledge. Counter to this clinician- and researcher-centred lens is a growing interest and awareness of patients as experts in their health. While naturopathic medicine is described and experienced as a patient-centred system of traditional medicine, the position of patient-held knowledge is unclear particularly when considered alongside their use of other more objective forms of knowledge such as research evidence.MethodsThis international online cross-sectional survey aimed to explore naturopathic practitioners' perceptions of the value and contribution of patient-shared knowledge and information within the context of naturopathic clinical consultations.ResultsThe survey was completed by 453 naturopathic practitioners (response rate: 74.3%). Approximately two-thirds (68.2%) of respondents reported using information shared by the patient. Most rated 'information provided by the patient' as either 'extremely important' (60.7%) or 'very important' (31.4%) to patients. Highest levels of trust were reported for information provided by the patient ('completely': 9.9%; 'a lot': 53.6%). Most practitioners indicated they trusted knowledge and information derived from the patient's personal health history 'completely' (n = 79; 21.8%) or 'a lot' (n = 226; 62.4%) from the patient's perspective of living with a health condition ('completely' [n = 63, 17.4%]; 'a lot' [n = 224, 61.9%]). Patients were the highest ranked stakeholder group (mean: 1.5) perceived to influence NP use of patient experience of living with a health condition to inform clinical decision-making.ConclusionResearchers and policy makers are increasingly focused on the value of the 'expert patient' in clinical decision-making, yet health professionals' report challenges and, in some cases, resistance to meaningfully engaging with patient-shared knowledge in practice. However, our study has found patient-shared knowledge - inclusive of patient experience of their health condition - is among the knowledge used and trusted by naturopathic practitioners to inform their clinical decision-making. This study both offers insights into the knowledge translation behaviours of an under-researched health profession and provides a novel contribution to the wider aim of adopting patient-shared knowledge into clinical care more generally.
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页数:10
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