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Priorities in the primary care of persons experiencing homelessness: convergence and divergence in the views of patients and provider/experts

Homeless individuals face unique challenges in health care. Several US initiatives seeking to advance patient-centered primary care for homeless persons are more likely to succeed if they incorporate the priorities of the patients they are to serve. However, there has been no prior research to elici...

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Published in:Patient preference and adherence 2016-01, Vol.10 (Issue 1), p.153-158
Main Authors: Steward, Jocelyn, Holt, Cheryl L, Pollio, David E, Austin, Erika L, Johnson, Nancy, Gordon, Adam J, Kertesz, Stefan G
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container_end_page 158
container_issue Issue 1
container_start_page 153
container_title Patient preference and adherence
container_volume 10
creator Steward, Jocelyn
Holt, Cheryl L
Pollio, David E
Austin, Erika L
Johnson, Nancy
Gordon, Adam J
Kertesz, Stefan G
description Homeless individuals face unique challenges in health care. Several US initiatives seeking to advance patient-centered primary care for homeless persons are more likely to succeed if they incorporate the priorities of the patients they are to serve. However, there has been no prior research to elicit their priorities in primary care. This study sought to identify aspects of primary care important to persons familiar with homelessness based on personal experience or professional commitment, and to highlight where the priorities of patients and professionals dedicated to their care converge or diverge. This qualitative exercise asked 26 homeless patients and ten provider/experts to rank 16 aspects of primary care using a card sort. Patient-level respondents (n=26) were recruited from homeless service organizations across all regions of the USA and from an established board of homeless service users. Provider/expert-level respondents (n=10) were recruited from veteran and non-veteran-focused homeless health care programs with similar geographic diversity. Both groups gave high priority to accessibility, evidence-based care, coordination, and cooperation. Provider/experts endorsed patient control more strongly than patients. Patients ranked information about their care more highly than provider/experts. Accessibility and the perception of care based on medical evidence represent priority concerns for homeless patients and provider/experts. Patient control, a concept endorsed by experts, is not strongly endorsed by homeless patients. Understanding how to assure fluid communication, coordination, and team member cooperation could represent more worthy targets for research and quality improvement in this domain.
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source Taylor & Francis Open Access; PubMed Central
subjects Evidence-based medicine
Homeless Persons
Homelessness
Organizational communication
Organizations
Original Research
Patient-Centered Care
Primary Care
Provider perspectives
Rankings
Social services
title Priorities in the primary care of persons experiencing homelessness: convergence and divergence in the views of patients and provider/experts
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