2015
DOI: 10.15265/iy-2015-013
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Why Patient Centered Care Coordination Is Important in Developing Countries?

Abstract: SummaryPatient Centered Care Coordination (PCCC) focuses on the patient health care needs. PCCC involves the organization, the patients and their families, that must coordinate resources in order to accomplish the goals of PCCC. In developing countries, where disparities are frequent, PCCC could improve clinical outcomes, costs and patients satisfaction. Objective: the IMIA working group Health Informatics for Development analyzes the benefits, identifies the barriers and proposes strategies to reach… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Interventions aimed at incorporating patient-centered NCD management within existing community-based health efforts, traditionally oriented towards infectious disease and malnutrition, may prove to be both cost-effective and transformative [30]. New technologies such as m-health (mobile phone-based health technology) may allow for implementation of patient-centered care directly in rural communities [31, 32]. As with any new health system intervention, the ideal program should be low-cost, require minimal input of new resources, culturally acceptable, and scalable.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interventions aimed at incorporating patient-centered NCD management within existing community-based health efforts, traditionally oriented towards infectious disease and malnutrition, may prove to be both cost-effective and transformative [30]. New technologies such as m-health (mobile phone-based health technology) may allow for implementation of patient-centered care directly in rural communities [31, 32]. As with any new health system intervention, the ideal program should be low-cost, require minimal input of new resources, culturally acceptable, and scalable.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[ 13 ] Patient-centered care has the potential to improve quality of care in the healthcare system of a developing country such as Pakistan. [ 14 ] Traditionally, concepts such as patients’ perceptions and holistic medicine have largely been ignored by healthcare providers in developing countries. [ 15 ] In an attempt to alleviate the situation, University of Health Sciences, Lahore, included behavioral sciences in the curriculum of public-sector medical colleges and conducted its first examination in 2007.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%