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Asthma phenotypes

Filling the patient–provider knowledge gap: a patient advocate to address asthma care and self-management barriers

, MPH, , PhD, , BA, , BA, , AS, , PhD, MSW, , MD, MPH, , MS & , MD, MSc, MA show all
Pages 1027-1036 | Received 23 May 2018, Accepted 03 Sep 2018, Published online: 04 Oct 2018
 

Abstract

Introduction: In an ongoing study, a new clinical role adapted from a patient navigator called the patient advocate (PA) met with patients before medical visits, attended appointments and afterwards reviewed provider instructions. This qualitative analysis examines the perspectives of PAs and providers regarding their experiences with patients to understand how a PA can help patients and providers achieve better asthma control. Methods: PAs recorded journal entries about their experiences with patients. Provider focus groups and interviews were conducted by researchers and transcribed. Analysis was based on the Grounded Theory approach for qualitative research, using open and then focused coding. Two researchers independently coded these sources until intercoder agreement was achieved. Results: Upon review of 31 journal entries on PA experiences with 24 patients and transcripts from 2 provider focus groups and 12 provider interviews, 5 themes emerged surrounding asthma care and self-management: medication adherence, follow-up, communication, social determinants of health and time. While patients shared with PAs specific socioeconomic barriers to medication adherence and follow-up, providers often did not know about these problems and cited barriers to communication. Time restrictions on medical visits further limited communication. Conclusions: Perspectives reported here illustrate a gap in knowledge and understanding between patients and providers. The PA’s unique relationship with patients and presence inside and outside of medical visits allowed them to learn contextual patient information unknown to providers. PAs and providers cited numerous ways PAs can help to improve patient–provider mutual understanding.

Declaration of interest

Heather Black is employed by Merck & Co, Inc. The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Additional information

Funding

This project was funded by NIH/NHLBI R18 HL116285.

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