Preventive Medicine Reports (Sep 2018)

Practice-, Provider-, and Patient-level interventions to improve preventive care: Development of the P3 Model

  • Robert A. Bednarczyk,
  • Allison Chamberlain,
  • Kara Mathewson,
  • Daniel A. Salmon,
  • Saad B. Omer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
pp. 131 – 138

Abstract

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For adequate provision of preventive services, there is an interplay between activities at the healthcare practice, healthcare provider, and patient levels of the clinical encounter. Commonly used health promotion and behavior theoretical models address some of these three levels, but none fully account for all three. Building off of key components of many existing theoretical models, including the Health Belief Model, Theory of Planned Behavior/Theory of Reasoned Action, Social Cognitive Theory, Social Ecological Model, and the Systems Model of Clinical Preventive Care, we describe the development of the P3 (Practice-, Provider-, and Patient-level) Model for preventive care interventions. The P3 Model accounts for all three levels of the clinical encounter, and the factors that impact these levels, concurrently. This yields a model for preventive care that is applicable and adaptable to different settings, and that provides a framework for the development, implementation, and evaluation of preventive care promotion interventions. The applicability of the P3 Model is shown through two exemplar preventive care programs – immunization and colorectal cancer screening. The P3 Model allows interventions to be developed and evaluated in a modular approach, to allow more practical refinement and optimization of the intervention. Keywords: Health promotion, Behavior change, Behavior change theory, Cancer prevention and control, Immunization