- Research article
- Open access
- Published:
Actions and processes that patients, family members, and physicians associate with patient- and family-centered care
BMC Family Practice volume 20, Article number: 35 (2019)
Abstract
Background
Patient- and family-centered care (PFCC) is increasingly linked to improved communication, care quality, and patient decision making. However, in order to consistently implement and study PFCC, health care systems and researchers need a solid evidentiary base. Most current definitions and models of PFCC are broad and conceptual, and difficult to translate into measurable behaviors and actions. This paper provides a brief overview of all actions that focus group respondents associated with PFCC in ambulatory (outpatient) care settings and then explores actions associated with the concept of “dignity and respect” in greater detail.
Methods
We conducted nine focus groups with patients, family members, and physicians in three metropolitan regions across the United States. Group discussions were transcribed and analyzed using a thematic analysis approach.
Results
We identified 14 domains and 47 specific actions that patients, family members, and physicians associate with PFCC. In addition to providing a detailed matrix of these domains and actions, this paper details the actions associated with the “dignity and respect” concept. Key domains identified under “dignity and respect” include: 1) building relationships, 2) providing individualized care, and 3) respecting patients’ time. Within these domains we identified specific actions that break down these abstract ideas into explicit and measurable units such as taking time, listening, including family, and minimizing wait times. We identified 9, 6, and 3 specific actions associated, respectively, with building relationships, providing individualized care, and respecting patients’ time.
Conclusions
Our work fills a critical gap in our ability to understand and measure PFCC in ambulatory care settings by breaking down abstract concepts about PFCC into specific measurable actions. Our findings can be used to support research on how PFCC affects clinical outcomes and develop innovative tools and policies to support PFCC.
Background
Making health care more patient- and family-centered is an increasingly important goal for a range of stakeholders including private and government health care organizations, payers, research funders, patients and families, patient-advocacy groups, and clinician stakeholders [1,2,3,4,5,6]. A growing body of evidence links improvements in patient- and family-centered care (PFCC) to improved communication and quality, better patient decision making, decreases in unnecessary procedures, and improvements in care efficiency [7,8,9,10,11]. A challenge to improving and providing an evidentiary base for PFCC practices is the lack of consensus on how to define and measure PFCC [12]. There are numerous PFCC definitions and models, but most are broad and conceptual, and difficult to translate into measurable behaviors and actions. Systematic reviews have recently mapped the themes and concepts across PFCC definitions [2, 13,14,15,16]. Common concepts include dignity and respect [2, 16, 17], individualized care [16, 18, 19], patient and family engagement, information sharing [2, 17, 18], emotional support [6], and access to care [15, 20, 21]. However, we still lack consensus regarding how best to translate these concepts into practical measurement tools to support PFCC research, improvement, and evaluation [12, 22, 23].
This paper is the result of a collaboration between the American College of Physicians, the Institute for Patient- and Family-Centered Care (IPFCC), the National Partnership for Women & Families, and Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute. The goal of our collaboration was to develop a behavior-based survey instrument to measure PFCC in primary care and other ambulatory care settings (such as outpatient specialty care). The survey was collaboratively developed by a team of patients, clinicians, and researchers. We began with a series of focus groups to elicit behaviors and actions that patients, family members (defined broadly to include friends and caregivers), and physicians associate with PFCC. We provide a brief overview of all actions respondents associated with PFCC in ambulatory care settings. Because of its particular saliency to patients and families, the actions and behaviors associated with the PFCC concept of “dignity and respect” are described in detail in this paper. These findings fill a critical gap in PFCC research by making abstract concepts about PFCC more concrete, observable, and measurable.
Methods
We conducted nine focus groups with 92 participants to understand how U.S. patients, family members, and physicians describe ideal PFCC, emphasizing details about specific actions.
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a.
Sampling/recruitment
To increase diversity in respondents’ experiences and attitudes, we conducted focus groups in three metropolitan regions—Greater Seattle, Greater Dallas, and Greater Philadelphia. In each region, we conducted separate focus groups with patients, family members, and physicians who spent at least half of their time working in outpatient settings (includes primary care, urgent care and specialty care).
To recruit patient and family caregivers, we contracted with local market-research firms that used a screening questionnaire we developed. We recruited physicians through the American College of Physicians membership. The Additional file 1 have recruitment details and surveys.
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b.
Data collection
Two research team members with experience facilitating focus groups and conducting qualitative research (CH and MFG) attended all focus groups. Participants received a meal and a cash incentive of $100.00 for patients and caregivers and $150.00 for physicians. Facilitators structured group discussions around a series of semi-structured questions that were developed to elicit stories about actions that participants felt were patient and family centered and to facilitate brainstorming around the specific actions they would associate with key concepts found in PFCC definitions (Additional file 1). Input about the questions was received from the entire research team as well as an advisory committee that included patients, clinicians, and researcher stakeholders. The interview guides were customized to each type of respondent—patients, family caregivers and physicians. Discussions lasted approximately 2 h for patients and family caregivers and 1.5 h for physicians.
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c.
Data analysis
The analysis team (MFG and CH) reviewed transcripts and the primary coder (MFG) drafted an initial code list using an inductive analysis approach that involves reading through the data and identifying themes that emerge organically from the data [24]. Because the interview guides emphasized eliciting actions respondents associated with PFCC, the majority of the emergent codes were specific actions that we organized under a priori domains. Both analyzers then coded a patient transcript using the draft code list, compared the results, discussed discrepancies and added and/or refined the codes to ensure that the codes were comprehensive and that the definitions were clear. After comparison, the process was repeated with caregiver and physician transcripts. After three rounds of iterative code development, the primary coder coded all transcripts using final codes and definitions. Atlas.ti was used to assist with coding and data management.
Once coding was completed, the full research team discussed key themes of interest and the organization of the codes. To develop an overall synthesis of the data, we extracted all relevant codes. The lead author (CH) reviewed the data with assistance from another team member (LM). We documented the synthesis with supporting codes in a coding memo. We organized findings in three levels: 1) PFCC concepts (based on the definition IPFCC, Table 1) [17]; 2) domains; and 3) actions. The coding memo and table were shared with all authors for input and feedback regarding the organization and language of data-derived domains and themes.
Results
The number of participants per group and key descriptive information are summarized in Table 2. Focus group participants represented a diversity of ages, races, and ethnicities.
A key aim of our focus groups was to identify specific and concrete actions that respondents associated with PFCC that could be observed and measured (Table 3). Not all actions fit into the four PFCC concepts in the IPFCC definition (Dignity and Respect, Information Sharing, Participation, Collaboration) so we created an “Other PFCC actions” concept. Actions within the Dignity and Respect concept were the most numerous and most often mentioned in focus groups and will be the primary focus of these results. For the Information Sharing concept, participants identified several information types that physicians and patients share with each other such as test results, explanations of disease processes and treatment procedures, advice regarding health-related issues (e.g. physical activity), treatment options and decision-making advice, and patient education materials as well as the desire for physicians to maximize technology to facilitate communication through the use of texts, secure messaging, and online platforms. The Participation concept included actions that required physicians and patients to interact and share responsibility for outcomes, including shared decision making and health coaching. For Collaboration, participants had limited direct, personal experience with activities that fit in this concept such as patient and family advisory councils and patient advisor participation in quality improvement efforts; the exceptions were filling out patient experience surveys and participating in focus groups. However, participants were interested in the Collaboration concept and had many recommendations for improving collaboration. Two domains, “Advocates for patient needs” and “Coordinates patient care,” and their associated actions were put in the “Other PFCC Actions” concept.
We asked participants to discuss PFCC in relationship to their “doctor’s office or health care center,” but they mainly talked about the actions of their physician or primary care provider. Therefore, we refer to physicians as carrying out PFCC actions although other care team members are also key to implementing PFCC. Related to the importance of all personnel implementing PFCC, we asked participants about openness to team-based care. Most were supportive if all team members exhibited professionalism comparable to their physician.
Deep dive: Dignity and Respect domains and action themes
We chose to focus on domains and actions in the Dignity and Respect for two reasons: 1) these actions were most frequently raised by participants, and 2) this concept is difficult to translate into observable actions and measures.
Builds relationships
The first domain of identified actions was associated almost exclusively with building ongoing patient-physician relationships.
Spends sufficient time
This was seen as a key aspect of relationship building and often discussed in relation to both patiently listening and exchanging information.
The thing I like about [my doctor] the most…she's very thorough and she's patient. And with the VA [Veterans Affairs], she's allocated 18 minutes for each patient; she throws that to the wind, she doesn't care. And she's reprimanded for it a lot of times, she told me, but she'll sit there and listen to you, let's say, up to a half hour. How is everything going in your life…(Patient, Region 3)
…when I take a long time with my patients…that’s when everybody is very happy and things are smooth and I felt satisfied with what I did, what the patient did, their family did…Sometimes when you rush through things or you pay attention more to the EHR [electronic health record] or want to finish your notes on time, I have done that, too, and when I do that, I don’t feel good about it…(Physician, Region 1).
Listens/gives undivided attention
Being attentive and actively listening to patients and family members was another important action that demonstrated Dignity and Respect. Active listening was perceived as showing that physicians truly understood a patient’s needs. It also validated their perspectives and knowledge.
He [my doctor] listened to you, never tried to tell you what was wrong with you, worked with you to try to establish what was wrong with you, what needed to be done to reach a common level of patient/doctor relationship in the sense that you walked away at least knowing, okay, we both agree that if I have a pain in my toe, it’s in my toe, it’s not in my head. (Patient, Region 3).
Expresses caring and empathy
Another key action theme in Builds Relationship was being outwardly caring and/or expressing caring and empathy to patients. Patient and family members recounted numerous stories of physicians behaving in this way. They felt this was a critical aspect of healing and expressed that it sometimes meant going above and beyond basic job expectations.
You know, doctors are supposed to care. I mean, that’s what we grew up with…I mean, some of them just act like they don’t care. So I think the best bedside manner is when you make that person who’s obviously in distress or in a crisis in their life, you let them know, “I really care”…I don’t know if that can be trained into somebody, but that’s something that a person needs to have as a human being to another human being, some kind of compassion…(Family, Region 3).
A physician described a very complex older patient she works with, emphasizing the role of caring in the therapeutic relationship.
And we see her like every third day or something. Just sit down, kind of hand holding. And she will just come give me a hug. And she was like, “I just feel so much better just seeing you and just feel like somebody’s there who cares for me.” (Physician, Region 2).
Makes personal connection—verbal
Related to, but different from “listening” was connecting with patients more actively through conversation. This included talking respectfully with patients and family members, asking patients about their personal lives, and sharing details about their own, such as hobbies and personal health care experiences.
Well, my primary, when I go to him…he'll stop and pull out a stool, sit down. Ask me how I'm doing, what's going on. And then what I thought was great was he went into his personal life: Well, you know, I'm going to see my parents, me and my wife, and we're going to spend some time there. And I was like, Okay, cool. That's great. So it's not all on me and what's going on with me. He takes the time to tell me what he's doing, you know, with his personal life. (Patient, Region 3)
Makes personal connection—nonverbal
Another aspect of making personal connections is using body language and nonverbal cues to establish a caring relationship. Respondents mentioned using eye contact, facial expressions, and appropriate physical touch, such as hand shakes to establish and deepen a respectful and caring relationship. For example, the patient quoted above mentioned the physician who “pulls out a stool and sits down” to physically cue presence and an interest in connecting. The physical examination process was also viewed as another way of non-verbally connecting.
One of the things we make sure we do is touch everybody.
FACILITATOR: Literally put your hands on?
PARTICIPANT 3: Human touch. You’d be surprised, the people that see doctors and never get a physical. (Physician, Region 3).
Communicates with honesty and transparency
Respondents identified communicating honestly and transparently as a critical relationship-building action. Trust often builds over time but is related to physicians being open about decision making, to avoid appearing motivated by external forces such as drug companies or personal gain.
And we know how corporate interest directs pharmaceutical recommendations…So an honest physician can say, “You don’t really need to take these meds. Here’s something that you can do that would really take care of the problem.” And without having to worry about [name of pharmaceutical company] breathing down his neck or the hospital making those kinds of demands on these doctors, implicitly or explicitly. (Family, Region 2).
Other relationship-building actions
Several other actions were mentioned less frequently and included “responds without judgment,” “protects privacy,” and “relays a sense of hope.”
Personalizes care
The second domain of actions revolve around ways that physicians provide care that is personalized to individual history, needs and preferences.
Knows the patient
Focus group participants often stated the importance of really knowing a patient’s health history, family dynamics, personal story and preferences. For example, a family member who responded described great PFCC as, “Knows me by name…You know, knows who I am when I walk in.” (Family, Region 3). Other important aspects of knowing a patient included reading the medical record prior to interacting with the patient, recalling past encounters and taking interest in patients’ goals, values, and life circumstances.
They should take the time and reread your file so when you come in they don’t say, remind me, what medications are you on again? Or what was the problem the last time? They know what the problem is, especially if it’s chronic and say, okay, yes, I remember you came in and this was a problem, these were the drugs you were on, tell me about your experience. If it’s not working, let’s find a new way to do it. (Family, Region 1).
Another way physicians got to know a patient was by treating other family members.
We had a family physician who saw my dad, my mom, all my siblings until he retired…he had an extensive knowledge of our family history on both sides of my mother and father and all the risks involved. And now every time I go to a new doctor…or a new hospital, I have to fill all this stuff out and think back to myself, okay, what do we have…So it would be nice to have…your history on MyChart, the family history. (Family, Region 2).
Includes family
Participants provided numerous examples of how including family was an important element of PFCC and improved care.
…the PCP [primary care provider] that I have now…has requested that next time you come, bring your wife along with you so I can meet your wife and be comfortable and talk with her if it becomes necessary to get to know her for a pertinent matter and also if there’s another family member if I can put on your record who I can talk with. If we find out something, he can get in touch with them. I gave them that information and I really appreciate it…(Patient, Region 1).
Understands and accommodates patients’ personal circumstances
This action involves physicians taking the time to truly understand a patient’s personal circumstances and how they impact their health, treatment choices, and/or ability to follow through with care recommendations. One physician recounted how understanding a patient’s personal circumstances and values was instrumental in allowing the patient to avoid being put in a nursing home.
Also a patient was placed in a nursing home and everything was done and there were papers to sign. I went there and it doesn’t look like the patient has dementia at all but you can’t challenge the whole family and the doctor who has seen him for several months. But I walked to the patient’s bedside and held his hand and said tell me what you like to do. His eyes brighten and he says “I like to cook”…He started to talk and it was normal. People said he didn’t know what day it was but there was no calendar in his house. If you talk to him, he’s completely normal. The only problem is he was not practicing good hygiene…He did not go to the nursing home, he stayed home just because of a little bit of communication. (Physician, Region 1).
Respondents also mentioned that home visits were another way physicians and care team members could understand a patients’ social context. One physician told the story of an older woman with multiple chronic conditions who was “going downhill”, emphasizing the benefits of visiting the patient in her home.
I think something that when you have the time and take the time to understand what’s going on with people, why they’re not getting better when you expect they should be, with everything you’re doing, you really often find out there’s more social kind of things than real medical things. (Physician, Region 3).
Elicits and respects patients’ values
In most groups, participants talked about physicians needing to know and respect patient values, both about their health care preferences and how they wanted to be treated. This ranged from overt willingness to research alternative healing approaches to addressing sensitive issues with consideration for personal preferences.
My father-in-law had leukemia for about 10 years. And towards the end, he was at [hospital name]…he enjoyed taking a shower; but he didn’t want to fall in the shower, and he didn’t want the nurse to be in there with him. So they allowed me– the nurse would stay outside– but they allowed me to go in and help him take a shower. (Family, Region 2).
Practices cultural competence and sensitivity
The need for physicians to be culturally competent was raised by participants in several groups.
I think it really goes back to what [Participant 6] was saying, for me—having multicultural competency and the age thing…I feel like every other time I go to the doctor, it’s…Are you sure you don’t have diabetes? Let’s give you a test for diabetes." It’s like just because I’m a large woman of color does not mean I have diabetes. You know, it’s just like also insensitivity as some doctors, without even reading your…chart…especially with size, I think it’s another like part of the cultural competence is size. Like my mom—one time I took her because she fell. She legitimately fell on the sidewalk and fractured her knee. And the doctor said, “Well, maybe if you weren’t so fat, you wouldn’t have fell.” (Family, Region 2).
Provides empathetic advice
Participants also mentioned wanting physicians to provide advice that was personalized to their specific circumstances and health needs. They often wanted to be told what physicians would do if they had to make similar choices.
I asked a couple of questions and he said a couple of times, well, for my mom, I would do this and in this situation, in my family, we would have done this or we would do this and that made me a lot more comfortable feeling like do we really need all these invasive things? If he was willing to do that for his mom, obviously, that would be the right choice for us, too. It made me more comfortable and confident in what he was saying. (Family, Region 1).
Respects patients’ and family members’ time
Respecting patients’ and family members’ time emerged as an important issue for many patient and family member participants.
Minimizes wait times
Patients and family members felt that long wait times could be interpreted as a sign of disrespect. They raised this issue repeatedly during focus groups as being related to PFCC.
I know everyone has had that experience where you go in to the doctor, you wait. Even though your appointment was at 2:00, you wait till 2:30. Or the nurse sees you, then you wait till like 3:00 or so like, eventually, it’s like an hour. So they don’t really take into consideration that your time is valuable sometimes. (Patient, Region 2).
Notifies patients about delays
Several groups suggested that physicians might address long waits by developing systems that communicated delays to patients. Suggestions included: using a form that tracks arrival and departure time, text notifications about delays, and systems such as those in restaurants that alert customers about wait times. Participants felt that ambulatory care practices could be more innovative and creative in this area, but emphasized that simple verbal notification would be an improvement over the current situation in many physician offices.
Balances time needed to build relationships with delays in seeing patients
Many patients understood and appreciated that sometimes long wait times resulted from clinicians taking the time for relationship building and providing the personalized care they identified as critical to PFCC. Several respondents noted this conflict and talked about the need to balance these two opposing aspects of PFCC—taking the time to build relationships and personalize care vs. respecting patients’ time.
The time issue is a double-edged sword. As a doctor, I’m sure you want to keep a good timing schedule but then you have situations where like in [Participant 12]'s case, he was with him for two hours. That wasn’t planned. You have to have a way of saying I really need to be with you because you’re important to me right now but I have a whole line of people, too. (Family, Region 1).
Discussion
We identified specific actions that patients, family members, and physicians associate with PFCC that may be used for measurement and quality improvement purposes, with a particular focus on the concept of dignity and respect. Our data surfaced a detailed list of actions that we organized under IPFCC key PFCC concepts. Not all domains and actions fit neatly under the four concepts. Therefore, several domains were designated “Other PFCC actions.” For this article, we chose to provide a detailed description of domains and actions under the Dignity and Respect concept, a critical aspect of PFCC that is often hard to translate into concrete measures, behaviors, and/or instructions for changes to clinical care. Within the concept of Dignity and Respect, we found three domains of actions: 1) building relationships, 2) providing individualized care, and 3) respecting patients’ time. We identified actions in these domains that break down these abstract ideas into specific and measurable units such as taking time, listening, including family, and minimizing wait times.
While PFCC has been the subject of a great deal of attention in the health services and clinical quality improvement literature, definitions and frameworks continue to be relatively abstract [2, 6, 15, 16, 19, 25,26,27] and measuring PFCC and associating outcomes [8, 11] continues to be a challenge. Existing measures used to assess PFCC focus primarily on patient satisfaction and/or patient-provider communication, which are overlapping but distinct constructs. We are not aware of any concrete measures of PFCC for primary care settings. Our paper fills this gap by elucidating specific, concrete actions that patients, caregivers, and physicians associated with PFCC. Our broad domains align with and expand upon previous work that focused on concepts such as respect [2, 16, 25], individualized care [16, 19, 26], participation [15, 25] and information sharing [2, 25, 26], while our action themes break these concepts down into discrete actions that can be operationalized and measured.
In addition to the work our team has done to translate these findings into a tool to help outpatient care teams improve and measure the patient and family centeredness of the care they provide, our findings have several other possible contributions to measuring and improving health care. Our action list may be helpful to practices and policymakers in planning and implementing redesign and “transformation” initiatives, specifically in prioritizing actions that patients and family members value and creating workflows and incentives that support care teams in providing PFCC. Finally, our findings could inform training for physicians and other health care workers who have direct responsibility for patient diagnosis, treatment, and ongoing preventive care.
Our study has several limitations. Although we gathered diverse opinions by conducting focus groups in three geographic regions and recruiting participants from a variety of ethnicities, ages, and insurance-coverage groups, our sample was self-selected. We might have missed perspectives not represented among our volunteers who lived primarily in urban and suburban areas. Also, many of the domains and actions were rooted in processes specific to the U.S. health care system and may have limited applicability outside the United States. Finally, for this paper, we chose to focus on the actions of physicians and care teams that contributed to PFCC in ambulatory care settings. However, we acknowledge that PFCC is a partnership between patients and care teams and a similar set of patient actions is likely to facilitate the provision of PFCC in other settings.
Conclusion
Promoting and facilitating PFCC is a key component of improving health care overall. As U.S. health care systems strive to achieve the triple aims [28], it is essential that we find effective and reliable ways to operationalize and measure PFCC and explore connections between PFCC and patient and clinical outcomes. This is especially true for the concept of dignity and respect in PFCC. Although these terms are frequently mentioned in the literature, no study has operationalized these terms in a way that promotes systematic research and evaluation. Our work is a critical step toward identifying and measuring dignity and respect when providing PFCC in ambulatory care settings. The domains and specific actions presented here are intended to support heath care research and innovations that thoughtfully and deliberately put patients and families at the center of care.
Abbreviations
- IPFCC:
-
Institute for Patient- and Family-Centered Care
- PFCC:
-
Patient- and family-centered care
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Acknowledgements
We want to express our appreciation to all the focus group participants for sharing their insights and experiences with us. We are grateful to Barb Forss for her insights as a patient advisor to this project. We also acknowledge our colleagues at the American College of Physicians for their project leadership—Steven Weinberger, MD—and assistance recruiting physicians to participate in focus groups—Arlene Weissman, PhD. Finally, we thank Chris Tachibana for providing technical editing for this manuscript.
Funding
This project was funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.
Availability of data and materials
The authors declare that the data supporting the findings of this study are available within the article. However, additional data are available upon request from the corresponding author [CH]. The data are not publicly available since they contain information that could compromise respondents’ confidentially as promised in the consent process.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
CH: Designed and collected qualitative data. Participated in the coding of the data, developed the analytic coding memo and drafted and revised the manuscript. MFG: Designed and collected qualitative data. Led the data coding process. Reviewed initial data analysis document (coding memo), reviewed multiple drafts of the manuscript. LM: Reviewed coded data and wrote first drafts of one section of the manuscript. Reviewed multiple drafts of the manuscript. MA: Provided leadership and input on the design for the project. Provided key background information and literature for the introduction and discussion. Reviewed and gave feedback on drafts of the manuscript. WN: Provided leadership and input on the design for the project. Reviewed and gave feedback on drafts of the manuscript. JMS: Provided leadership and input on the design for the project. Reviewed and gave feedback on drafts of the manuscript. DLF: Provided leadership and input on the design for the project. Reviewed and gave feedback on drafts of the manuscript. TMM: Provided input on the design for the project. Reviewed and gave feedback on drafts of the manuscript. KE: Provided overall project management and input on the design for the project. Reviewed and gave feedback on drafts of the manuscript. BJ: Provided leadership and input on the design for the project. Reviewed and gave feedback on drafts of the manuscript. RJR: As the principal investigator, was responsible for the overall design, collection and interpretation of the data. Reviewed and gave input into multiple drafts of the manuscript. All authors have read and approved the final manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Ethics approval and consent to participate
Study procedures were reviewed and determined to be exempt by the Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute’s Human Subjects Institutional Review Board. The exempt status meant that the consent processes were not mandated or overseen by the IRB. Verbal consent was attained and participants were informed that participation was voluntary and that their discussion was being audio recorded and transcribed. All participants were informed that verbatim quotes might be used and that we would remove identifiers to protect their confidentiality. All were given the opportunity to withdrawal participation at any time without penalty to them.
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Not applicable.
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The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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Additional file
Additional file 1:
An additional Word file entitled “Overview Manuscript Supplemental File” provides the recruitment screening questions and focus group guides. (DOCX 33 kb)
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Hsu, C., Gray, M.F., Murray, L. et al. Actions and processes that patients, family members, and physicians associate with patient- and family-centered care. BMC Fam Pract 20, 35 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-019-0918-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-019-0918-7