2022
DOI: 10.1177/13558196211071041
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Person-centred care and measurement: The more one sees, the better one knows where to look

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…This may include the development of dynamic assessments which focus not only on whether person-centred rehabilitation was delivered, but also how it happens, what allows it to happen, what skills are needed and so on. 99 It may be that evaluations need to move beyond measures as we conventionally understand them, and move towards integrating more qualitative, creative and participatory approaches to evaluating personcentred rehabilitation. 100 Learn from diverse perspectives of person-centred rehabilitation: An example from Māori culture Learning from diverse worldviews has the potential to enhance and augment our current understanding of person-centred rehabilitation.…”
Section: Build Person-centred Cultures Of Care In Rehabilitationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This may include the development of dynamic assessments which focus not only on whether person-centred rehabilitation was delivered, but also how it happens, what allows it to happen, what skills are needed and so on. 99 It may be that evaluations need to move beyond measures as we conventionally understand them, and move towards integrating more qualitative, creative and participatory approaches to evaluating personcentred rehabilitation. 100 Learn from diverse perspectives of person-centred rehabilitation: An example from Māori culture Learning from diverse worldviews has the potential to enhance and augment our current understanding of person-centred rehabilitation.…”
Section: Build Person-centred Cultures Of Care In Rehabilitationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alongside its instrumental value, person-centred care is also valued, not as a means to other valued ends like biomedical outcomes, well-being, or satisfaction but for its own sake, irrespective of its outcomes. The practice of person-centred care is endorsed as treating patients with respect, dignity, and compassion, involving them and recognising them as equals, and as affirming and empowering them 9 , 10 , 16 , 32 , 36 40 . The non-instrumental value of person-centred care underscores the distinctively ethical complexion of treating someone as a person , which accords them a distinctive status and demands and prohibits certain ways of relating to them—requiring, for example, respect for their autonomy, recognition of their capacity to suffer, calling them by their name, and not treating their body as a mere object.…”
Section: Person-centred Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The concept of person‐centredness has become established in approaches to the delivery of healthcare today. Providing person‐centred care involves respecting the values, experiences, needs and preferences of the person as a patient in the planning, coordinating and provision of care (McCormack, 2022). Healthcare professionals can also be patients and may have unique experiences to non‐healthcare professional.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%