Journal of Patient Experience (Sep 2023)

Use of a Person-Centered Narrative Intervention in an Outpatient Palliative Care Setting: A Feasibility Study

  • Heather Coats PhD, APRN-BC,
  • Nadia Shive BA, CCRC,
  • C Robert Bennett PhD, CPNP-AC, PPCNP-BC, CCRN,
  • Bonnie Adrian PhD, RN-BC,
  • Andrew D Boyd MD,
  • Ardith Z Doorenbos PhD, RN, FAAN,
  • Sarah J Schmiege PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23743735231202729
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

Person-centered narrative interventions offer potential solutions to facilitate a connection between the person receiving care and the person delivering the care, to improve quality of care, and positively impact a patient's biopsychosocial well-being. This single-arm feasibility study investigates patient-reported outcomes and barriers/facilitators to the implementation of an all-virtually delivered person-centered narrative intervention into the person's electronic health record. Overall, electronic data collection for the patient-reported outcomes was feasible. All 15 participants felt participating in the study was “easy” and “enjoyable,” and “not a burden.” The facilitators of implementation included: “helpful to the clinician,” “appreciated looking at me as whole person,” “be seen and heard,” “had a connection and trust,” and “felt comfortable and relaxing.” The barriers to implementation included: “completing all the paperwork,” “being rushed for time to complete the PCNI,” and some “emotion” during collection of narrative. The use of person-centered narrative interventions is a way to deploy dedicated tools to shift dehumanized healthcare delivery to a more humanized person-centered care that treats people as experts in their own life narratives by incorporating their beliefs, values, and preferences into their plan of care.