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“It is you, me on the team together, and my child”: Attending, resident, and patient family perspectives on patient ownership Cover

“It is you, me on the team together, and my child”: Attending, resident, and patient family perspectives on patient ownership

Open Access
|Dec 2020

Figures & Tables

Table 1

Participant characteristics

Participant Group

Total

Military

Female

Residents

 9

5 (55%)

7 (78%)

– First-year

 3

2 (67%)

2 (67%)

– Second-year

 3

1 (33%)

3 (100%)

– Third-year

 3

2 (67%)

2 (67%)

Attending physicians

 9

5 (55%)

7 (78%)

Patient family members

10

7 (70%)

6 (60%)

Fig. 1

Visual representation of theory of patient ownership within continuity clinics

40037_2020_635_Fig1_HTML.png

Table 2

Examples of affective and behavioral elements of patient ownership in a continuity clinic setting

Affect

Behaviors

Physician

 Feels responsibility for patient’s care

 Feels like primary care provider for patient

 Sees the patient’s concerns as their own

 Provides medical care

 Follows up clinical care, radiology, laboratory studies, and consults

 Coordinates care between medical care team and subspecialists

 Listens to patient

 Knows the patient well, both medically and personally

 Makes important care decisions

 Seeks continuity with patients

Patient/Patient family

 Identifies physician as primary care provider

 Feels known by physician

 Feels heard by physician

 Trusts physician

 Advocates for self/patient

 Carries out home treatment plans

 Actively seeks out appointments/continuity with physician

Language: English
Submitted on: Mar 26, 2020
Accepted on: Nov 5, 2020
Published on: Dec 2, 2020
Published by: Bohn Stafleu van Loghum
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2020 Michelle E. Kiger, Holly S. Meyer, Lara Varpio, published by Bohn Stafleu van Loghum
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.