articleHealth AffairsJan 1, 2009Closed access

What ‘Patient-Centered’ Should Mean: Confessions Of An Extremist

Institute for Healthcare Improvement

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

"Patient-centeredness" is a dimension of health care quality in its own right, not just because of its connection with other desired aims, like safety and effectiveness. Its proper incorporation into new health care designs will involve some radical, unfamiliar, and disruptive shifts in control and power, out of the hands of those who give care and into the hands of those who receive it. Such a consumerist view of the quality of care, itself, has important differences from the more classical, professionally dominated definitions of "quality." New designs, like the so-called medical home, should incorporate that change.

Citation impact

862
total citations
FWCI
91.71
Percentile
100%
References
20
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Dimension (graph theory)
  • Quality (philosophy)
  • Power (physics)
  • Health care
  • Control (management)
  • Psychology
  • Patient care
  • Medical care
No related works found for this paper.