患者生态系统映射(PEM):支持医疗保健系统转移

Tom Inns
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引用次数: 0

摘要

卫生部门正在积极采取许多创新办法,其中大多数来自质量改进领域。虽然这些方法很有效,可以产生显著的结果,但在医疗保健中使用时,它们通常集中于单个患者途径或医疗保健系统的特定组件——然而,医疗保健中的许多挑战与患者和工作人员的经验以及服务不同部分之间的不良接口有关。在传统的质量改进(QI)工具箱中,支持探索这些更全面的挑战的方法相对较少。然而,设计和系统思维有很多东西可以提供。设计思维的方法和框架以用户为中心,鼓励发散和收敛思维,促进早期原型设计。通过可视化进行迭代和支持协作。系统思维有助于绘制系统中不同参与者和元素之间的复杂联系和关系,它探索流程。反馈循环并鼓励从事件、趋势、联系和心态的角度整体看待系统。为了将设计和系统思维转化为行动,医疗保健专业人员需要围绕他们非常特殊的挑战进行设计和系统方法,这些方法用健康词汇进行描述,并补充现有的质量改进范例。本文描述了如何开发患者生态系统映射方法,使医疗团队能够构建他们工作的患者路径的“伦敦地铁”风格地图,然后使用它来反映潜在的改进。描述了映射过程的原理。描述了患者生态系统测绘方法如何用于各种项目以及苏格兰和北爱尔兰的例子。这些地图起到了边界对象的作用,打破了孤岛,使团队能够拥有自己的医疗保健领域。本文还描述了来自系统思维的不同框架,如冰山模型,用于帮助审查地图的方式。这项工作是一个案例研究,说明如何将设计和系统思考原则集成到具有现实世界价值的工作方法中。这项工作也是一个非设计专业人士(来自医疗保健)如何提高设计方法技能的案例研究。
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Patient Ecosystem Mapping (PEM): Supporting System-Shifting in Healthcare

Many approaches to innovation are active in the health sector, the majority derived from the world of quality improvement. While these methods are potent and can yield significant results, when used in healthcare they frequently concentrate on individual patient pathways or specific components of a healthcare system - yet many of the challenges in healthcare are associated with patient and staff experiences and the poor interfaces between different parts of a service.

In the conventional quality improvement (QI) toolbox there are relatively few methods that support exploration of these more holistic challenges. Design and systems thinking, however, have much to offer. Design thinking has methods and frameworks that put the user at the centre, encourage divergent and convergent thinking, promote early prototyping & iteration and support collaboration through visualisation. Systems thinking helps map the complex connections and relationships between different actors and elements within a system, it explores flows & feedback loops and encourages looking at the system in its entirety from the perspectives of events, trends, connections and mindsets.

To translate design and systems thinking into action, healthcare professionals need design and systems methods that are framed around their very particular challenges, are described in the vocabulary of health and complement existing paradigms of quality improvement.

This paper describes how a Patient Ecosystem Mapping methodology has been developed that enables a healthcare team to build a ‘London Underground’ style map of the patient pathways within which they work and then use this to reflect on potential improvements. The principles of the mapping process are described.

Examples of how the Patient Ecosystem Mapping methodology has been used on various projects and Scotland and Northern Ireland are described. The maps have acted as Boundary Objects, breaking down silos and empowering teams to take ownership of their areas of healthcare. The way different frameworks from systems thinking, such as the iceberg model, have been used to help review the maps is also described.

The work is a case study in how design and systems thinking principles can be integrated into a working method with real world value. The work is also a case study in how non-design professionals (from healthcare) can be upskilled in design approaches.

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