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Research ArticlePolicy Forum

Culture Change to Promote Patient Engagement

It Isn't How… It's Who

Mary Sue Collier
North Carolina Medical Journal July 2015, 76 (3) 168-170; DOI: https://doi.org/10.18043/ncm.76.3.168
Mary Sue Collier
clinical content development lead, Health Research & Educational Trust, American Hospital Association, Chicago, Illinois
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Abstract

Patient and family engagement is no longer a “why,” “when,” or even “how” conversation. So why are many health care organizations still struggling to embrace the patient as a partner? Now is the time to shift the conversation to a personal level.

  • ©2015 by the North Carolina Institute of Medicine and The Duke Endowment. All rights reserved.
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North Carolina Medical Journal: 76 (3)
North Carolina Medical Journal
Vol. 76, Issue 3
July-August 2015
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Culture Change to Promote Patient Engagement
Mary Sue Collier
North Carolina Medical Journal Jul 2015, 76 (3) 168-170; DOI: 10.18043/ncm.76.3.168

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Culture Change to Promote Patient Engagement
Mary Sue Collier
North Carolina Medical Journal Jul 2015, 76 (3) 168-170; DOI: 10.18043/ncm.76.3.168
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • #1: Define What Patient Engagement Means to You
    • #2: Make a Personal Choice to Change
    • #3: Develop Personal Resilience in Order to Sustain Change
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Cited By...

  • The Patient Engagement Prescription
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More in this TOC Section

Policy Forum

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  • From Here to There—With a Spring in Our Steps
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Patient and Family Engagement

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  • Spotlight on the Safety Net
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INVITED COMMENTARIES AND SIDEBARS

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