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Boxes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2020

Ellen Nolte
Affiliation:
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Sherry Merkur
Affiliation:
European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies
Anders Anell
Affiliation:
Lunds Universitet, Sweden
Jonathan North
Affiliation:
European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies
Type
Chapter
Information
Achieving Person-Centred Health Systems
Evidence, Strategies and Challenges
, pp. xxii - xxiv
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Boxes

  • 2.1Selected definitions of patient- and person-centred care

  • 3.1Approaches to collect data on people’s views and experiences of care

  • 3.2Personal budgets and related schemes: an overview

  • 3.3Assessment of the 2015 Patient Act, Sweden

  • 3.4Self-management support strategies in European countries

  • 4.1What do we know about whether people want to engage in health care decision-making at individual and collective levels?

  • 4.2The role of ‘power’ in the physician–patient interaction

  • 4.3Whose experience counts? Patient involvement in health technology assessment decisions in Australia

  • 4.4Health literacy levels in European countries

  • 4.5A national strategy to strengthen health literacy at all levels in Austria

  • 4.6Access to and use of e-health portals in Australia, Denmark and Estonia

  • 4.7Recommendations for implementation of e-health systems based on a systematic review of systematic reviews

  • 4.8Measuring and reporting the performance of institutions and practitioners in health care

  • 4.9Skills education and training framework for person-centred care in England

  • 4.10Key factors that are likely to enhance the success of large-system transformation initiatives in health care

  • 5.1The medical approach: community mobilization for mental health promotion among Cape Verdean immigrants in the Netherlands

  • 5.2The health service approach: citizen participation in the Italian health care system

  • 5.3The community development approach: community participation in the design of rural primary care services in Scotland

  • 6.1Consumers United for Evidence-Based Healthcare

  • 6.24PI Involvement Standards (NSUN)

  • 6.3Understanding the impact of research participation

  • 7.1Measurement of patients’ experience in England

  • 7.2Measurement of patients’ experience in Germany

  • 7.3Measurement of patients’ experience in Italy

  • 7.4Commonwealth Fund international surveys

  • 7.5OECD Health Care Quality Indicators

  • 7.6National PROMs programme in England

  • 7.7Eurobarometer surveys

  • 9.1Observed health insurance switching patterns in Israel

  • 11.1Excerpt from the 2015 Patient Act, Sweden

  • 11.2A reasonable patient

  • 11.3The ethical imperative for shared decision-making

  • 11.4The CollaboRATE tool: a three-item patient-reported measure of SDM

  • 12.1Taxonomy of self-management support as proposed by Taylor et al. (2014)

  • 12.2Managing conditions well vs. managing (or living) well with conditions

  • 12.3The value of different aspects of self-management support

  • 12.4Implementing self-management support at the local level in the English NHS

  • 13.1The European Charter of Patients’ Rights

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