National
Patient Advocate Foundation Invites Asheville to Share
“What Matters to You?”
On December 7, the National Patient Advocate
Foundation (NPAF) and the Mountain Area Health Education Center (MAHEC) will
host the first of two national skilled communications workshops to support shared
decision making in healthcare.
"Person-centered care requires that patients and
providers have the communications skills to talk about what matters at critical
points in the treatment process,” shares Gwen Darien, NPAF executive vice president for patient
advocacy. “This workshop brings patients, providers and community
advocates together to identify and develop those skills.”
The workshop will build on the recently completed Roadmap to Consumer Clarity in Health
Care Decision Making by developing
a template and resources for future community-based workshops across the country.
“The Roadmap is about health, dignity, and compassion,” shares Meg
Gaines, JD, LLM, the workshop’s keynote speaker, ovarian cancer survivor, and director
of the Center
for Patient Partnerships at the University of Wisconsin. “Quality healthcare comes down to health and
caring,” she adds. “We need to learn how to do that better, heart to heart.”
The Roadmap model for shared decision making was developed by NPAF
and the Patient Advocate Foundation with support from the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation.
The Asheville workshop will focus on developing patient-centered
conversations in clinical settings that support rural and underserved
populations, groups that MAHEC has served in Western North Carolina for more
than 40 years. This first event will serve as a prototype for future events
including a second skilled communications workshop focused on urban populations
planned for Chicago this spring.
“I’m excited to work with our community partners to build tools
that will help patients have these important conversations with their
providers,” explains Kathy Foley, PhD, MAHEC’s research director. “It can be as
simple as asking, ‘What matters to you?’ When we ask patients about their goals
and values, we can develop a care plan that includes them.”
NPAF leadership, National Human Genome Research Institute’s Carla
Easter, PhD, and MAHEC researchers and clinicians will guide workshop
participants in a series of interactive panel discussions, human-centered
design activities, and a narrative medicine workshop designed to help patients
tell their unique stories.
There
are few spaces available for community members and clinicians
interested in advancing shared decision making in healthcare. This workshop is free, and lunch will
be provided. Registration is required.
The
Mountain Area Health Education Center (MAHEC) was established in 1974 and is a leader in
healthcare, education and innovation. Located in Asheville, MAHEC serves a
16-county region in Western North Carolina. It is the largest Area Health Education Center in
North Carolina, which evolved to address national and state concerns with the
supply, retention and quality of health professionals. MAHEC’s mission is to
train the next generation of healthcare professionals for Western North
Carolina through quality healthcare, innovative education, and best practice
models that can be replicated nationally. For more information on MAHEC, visit www.mahec.net.
No comments:
Post a Comment