Journal of Patient Experience (Jan 2024)
Co-designing Healthcare Quality Improvement: The Kovacs Burns & George Orientation Guide
Abstract
To prepare healthcare organizations and patients/families to be equally ready to become partners in co-designing healthcare policy, practices, and improvements, there is a need to (1) understand how “co-design ready” organizations and their staff and care providers are to co-design health care policies, practices, and improvements with patients and families; (2) understand how prepared patients and families, as users of the health system, are to step into co-designer roles with confidence so that their voices will be heard as they influence the development or changes to improve healthcare system policies, services, practices, and products; (3) anticipate and/or address challenges with meeting the expectations of what is involved with the co-design approach, including with recruiting, preparing, and training care setting leaders, staff/care providers, and patient/family advisors; (4) ensure care settings provided appropriate tools and resources to support co-design; and (5) guide the shift in culture from engagement to co-design. Recommendations for enabling co-design in care settings include providing an orientation and preparation workshop and guide/workbook. An example of an orientation and preparation workshop is shared.