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Doha Today / Community

250 healthcare professionals complete patient-centred care training

Published: 25 Feb 2019 - 04:56 pm | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 10:15 am
Peninsula

The Peninsula

DOHA: Nearly 250 clinicians at Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) have completed a Compassionate Human Interactions workshop designed to reinforce patient-centred care principles and practices.

Patient-centred care is defined as providing care that is respectful of, and responsive to, individual patient preferences, needs, and values, and ensuring that patient values guide all clinical decisions.

The four-day workshop, which was organised by HMC’s Center for Patient Experience and Staff Engagement (CPESE), was held in partnership with Planetree, the US-based global leader in person-centred care. The training is part of Planetree’s Person-Centred Care designation; the only program of its kind, the designation formally recognises an organisation’s ability to deliver excellence in person-centred care and is designed to connect healthcare professionals with the voices and perspectives of their patients and their families.

Five units from across HMC were selected to pioneer the patient-centred care philosophy, with staff from the Ambulatory Care Center, Communicable Disease Center, Enaya Specialized Care Center, Home Health Care Service, and the Private Nursing Service participating. Staff from HMC’s CPESE and Nesma’ak teams also completed the workshop.

Dr Susan Frampton, Planetree International President, said the Compassionate Human Interactions workshop is an interactive curriculum that has been delivered around the world. She said a key focus of the training is helping healthcare staff learn concrete ways to express compassion so that patients and families feel not only cared for, but also cared about.

“Person-centred care is based on the premise that quality care is not only the right care delivered at the right time, but also care delivered with attitudes of compassion,” said Dr Frampton.

“So many trainings for healthcare professionals focus on building the skills necessary to carry out specific tasks. Planetree’s Compassionate Human Interactions workshop focuses on how these tasks should be carried out – with attitudes of caring and compassion – and showcases practical strategies for doing so,” added Dr Frampton.

According to Nasser Al Naimi, Deputy Chief of Quality, Center for Patient Experience and Staff Engagement, and Director of the Hamad Healthcare Quality Institute (HHQI), the training is being provided to healthcare staff as part of ongoing efforts to enhance HMC’s ability to provide a positive patient experience while strengthening its existing culture of empathy and compassion.

“Twenty Certified Facilitators will conduct Compassionate Human Interactions training for other HMC staff. There will be another batch of Compassionate Human Interactions training in the future to cover other HMC facilities, all aimed at ensuring the best possible patient experience,” said Al Naimi.