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The WHO and our governance advocate that health professionals should organize care around the patient, considering his or her values, needs and preferences, and enabling the patient to develop the capacity to self-manage the chronic health problems he or she faces. Chronic disease is an ongoing dynamic process and adaptation to this process is complicated by the interaction of several determinants: self-management capacity, level of health literacy, quality of life and experience of care. To best support chronic disease, the recommendation is to adopt a management strategy that allows chronic patients to play an active role in the management of their condition and in the day-to-day decision-making process. The management of chronic pathologies is one of the specialties in which Advanced Practice Nurses are positioned, in primary care, outside hospital. Nursing care benefits from care models that allow for more adapted responses, regarding particular care situations, or certain patient typologies. The Humanistic Partnership Health Care Model (MPHS) implement in current Advanced Practice Nurse (APN) practice.
Full description
The IMPACT program proposes to integrate the MPHS model into primary care, within advanced practice nursing care, to strengthen the partnership of the patient with chronic disease. This model will allow the advanced practice nurse to co-construct with the patient partner a care trajectory that will be integrative, considering his aspirations and priorities to carry out his life project, while coping with his chronic pathology(ies). To do this, particular attention to the determinants of adaptation to chronic disease: self-management capacity, health literacy, quality of life and experience of care is pay.
The IMPACT program will use the theoretical framework of the MPHS model of care to structure the advanced practice nursing care management and will incorporate validated measurement tools to address the determinants of patient adaptation to chronic disease. The specific management of the IMPACT program will consist of 3 phases: (1) co-definition of the health situation, (2) co-planning of care and co-actions, and (3) co-assessment with the patient and the team caring for him/her.
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- Patient not referred by a physician for APN follow-up
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Interventional model
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420 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Elise VEROT, MD; Amandine BAUDOT, CRA
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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