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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Purpose of this talk
- Principles of evidence-based practice (EBP)
- How to do EBP
- The process model
- The last step of the process model
- Linear vs. continuous EBP
- Changing therapy approaches
- Treatment of early stuttering: improvement time
- Recent published report of therapy effectiveness
- The acceptable time to wait for therapy progress
- What is patient-centered care (PCC)?
- What is and what isn't PCC is arguable
- What patient-centered care is not
- Seeking a single best therapy for any condition
- Price et al. (2015): a new “golden rule”?
- Benefits of PCC that your clients should expect
- PCC is also a process
- "Catching up” to PCC
- Asking some “heretical” questions
Topics Covered
- Principles of evidence-based practice (EBP)
- The process model
- Linear vs. continuous EBP
- Changing therapy approaches
- Treatment of early stuttering
- The acceptable time to wait for therapy progress
- Patient-centered care (PCC)
- Seeking a single best therapy for any condition
- Important questions that need asking
Talk Citation
Ratner, N.B. (2017, October 31). Bridging our mandates: evidence-based practice (EBP) and patient-centered care (PCC) 1 [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 22, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/GCNX6990.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Nan Bernstein Ratner has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Bridging our mandates: evidence-based practice (EBP) and patient-centered care (PCC) 1
Published on October 31, 2017
33 min
Other Talks in the Series: Speech Dysfluency
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hi, my name is Nan Bernstein Ratner.
I'm here to discuss the topic of bridging our mandates,
evidence-based practice, and patient-centered care.
I happened to work at the University of Maryland.
And, if you have any questions after this,
you can reach me at the e-mail that I've listed below.
0:18
I'm going to start first by explaining the purpose of this talk.
First, what I want to do is fully flesh out what evidence-based practice is and
what it means for practicing speech-language pathologist or NSLT.
And then, I want to introduce a second notion,
patient-centered care and how that can lead to
differences in how you might treat a particular patient, and then finally,
I'm going to talk a little bit about practice-based evidence,
which is how to gather site specific information to do better evidence-based practice.
But first, I'll start by reviewing the principles of evidence-based practice.
I think everybody thinks they understand it.
It's a very common test question,
but I thought it would be useful to take a moment to review
its principles before going on.
1:05
So, the principles of evidence-based practice in
a very oversimplified way is usually
characterized by the overlapping circles that you see.
The first is often considered one of
the most important steps that people don't take the time to do, unfortunately,
in practice and that is to find
the best research evidence for what they should do with a particular patient,
as opposed to simply using what they learned in
school or what they see their colleagues doing.
That is often positioned not so much as an equal part of evidence-based practice,
but rather a primary important component of evidence-based practice.
Unfortunately, the other two circles often get a little bit less attention.
One is clinical expertise and that really is not just about how to be
a good clinician in the sense that you know how to administer a particular intervention,
but also whether or not you understand when it's time to adapt an intervention,
when it's time to pick a different intervention for a particular client, and so on.
And I'm going to come back to this because clinical expertise
sometimes gets short shrift in this process,
and it often has very important ramifications for how we treat our patients.
And the last part is patient values.
Patient values are often not seen as
terribly important by many people working in speech language pathology
because we don't normally have an array of
options that patients know about in order to pick a particular treatment.
But, I'll also talk about patient values as we move forward
because sometimes there are things that we will suggest
that patients do or we may urge patients
to be more patient about progress in therapy when,
in fact, they're telling us something very important that we have to listen to.
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