Rules of engagement: Strategies used to enlist and retain underserved mothers in a mental health intervention

Patient engagement has been identified as both a goal and strategy to lower health care costs and improve health care outcomes. However, a lack of consensus and clarity exists as to how the process of patient engagement is implemented in clinical practice. Research addressing the underlying and cruc...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Maureen Baker, Beth Black, Linda Beeber
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: The Beryl Institute 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/a791d91b73384a5ca72dbb58b9394f49
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:a791d91b73384a5ca72dbb58b9394f49
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:a791d91b73384a5ca72dbb58b9394f492021-11-15T04:25:59ZRules of engagement: Strategies used to enlist and retain underserved mothers in a mental health intervention2372-0247https://doaj.org/article/a791d91b73384a5ca72dbb58b9394f492018-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://pxjournal.org/journal/vol5/iss3/14https://doaj.org/toc/2372-0247Patient engagement has been identified as both a goal and strategy to lower health care costs and improve health care outcomes. However, a lack of consensus and clarity exists as to how the process of patient engagement is implemented in clinical practice. Research addressing the underlying and crucial components of effective patient engagement is limited, leaving a significant gap as to how providers engage patients as active collaborators in their health and health care. This study provides specific, detailed insight and description into the processes through which advanced practice mental health nurses engaged low-income depressed mothers in a mental health intervention. The Interactive Care Model (ICM), a patient engagement framework, was used to examine and illuminate the key processes and partnership roles of patient engagement. Using a directed content analysis approach, we completed a secondary analysis of nursing narrative data using the 5 key processes and 7 partnership roles of the ICM to guide our analysis. The ICM demonstrated great utility in capturing the processes through which advanced practice nurses enlisted, engaged, and retained low-income depressed mothers in the mental health intervention. Additionally, the nursing narrative data provided specific detail and description as to how the ICM’s components were operationalized in practice. The ICM was validated by the nursing narrative data and provided sound organizational structure for the specific verbal and non-verbal engagement interventions nurses employed. Findings from this study can expand the knowledge base and understanding of the process of patient engagement and can help guide providers in executing behaviors that engage traditionally unengaged patients as active collaborators in their health and health care.Maureen BakerBeth BlackLinda BeeberThe Beryl Institutearticledirected content analysisinteractive care modelpatient engagementpatient centered careMedicine (General)R5-920Public aspects of medicineRA1-1270ENPatient Experience Journal (2018)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic directed content analysis
interactive care model
patient engagement
patient centered care
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
spellingShingle directed content analysis
interactive care model
patient engagement
patient centered care
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Maureen Baker
Beth Black
Linda Beeber
Rules of engagement: Strategies used to enlist and retain underserved mothers in a mental health intervention
description Patient engagement has been identified as both a goal and strategy to lower health care costs and improve health care outcomes. However, a lack of consensus and clarity exists as to how the process of patient engagement is implemented in clinical practice. Research addressing the underlying and crucial components of effective patient engagement is limited, leaving a significant gap as to how providers engage patients as active collaborators in their health and health care. This study provides specific, detailed insight and description into the processes through which advanced practice mental health nurses engaged low-income depressed mothers in a mental health intervention. The Interactive Care Model (ICM), a patient engagement framework, was used to examine and illuminate the key processes and partnership roles of patient engagement. Using a directed content analysis approach, we completed a secondary analysis of nursing narrative data using the 5 key processes and 7 partnership roles of the ICM to guide our analysis. The ICM demonstrated great utility in capturing the processes through which advanced practice nurses enlisted, engaged, and retained low-income depressed mothers in the mental health intervention. Additionally, the nursing narrative data provided specific detail and description as to how the ICM’s components were operationalized in practice. The ICM was validated by the nursing narrative data and provided sound organizational structure for the specific verbal and non-verbal engagement interventions nurses employed. Findings from this study can expand the knowledge base and understanding of the process of patient engagement and can help guide providers in executing behaviors that engage traditionally unengaged patients as active collaborators in their health and health care.
format article
author Maureen Baker
Beth Black
Linda Beeber
author_facet Maureen Baker
Beth Black
Linda Beeber
author_sort Maureen Baker
title Rules of engagement: Strategies used to enlist and retain underserved mothers in a mental health intervention
title_short Rules of engagement: Strategies used to enlist and retain underserved mothers in a mental health intervention
title_full Rules of engagement: Strategies used to enlist and retain underserved mothers in a mental health intervention
title_fullStr Rules of engagement: Strategies used to enlist and retain underserved mothers in a mental health intervention
title_full_unstemmed Rules of engagement: Strategies used to enlist and retain underserved mothers in a mental health intervention
title_sort rules of engagement: strategies used to enlist and retain underserved mothers in a mental health intervention
publisher The Beryl Institute
publishDate 2018
url https://doaj.org/article/a791d91b73384a5ca72dbb58b9394f49
work_keys_str_mv AT maureenbaker rulesofengagementstrategiesusedtoenlistandretainunderservedmothersinamentalhealthintervention
AT bethblack rulesofengagementstrategiesusedtoenlistandretainunderservedmothersinamentalhealthintervention
AT lindabeeber rulesofengagementstrategiesusedtoenlistandretainunderservedmothersinamentalhealthintervention
_version_ 1718428887217602560