{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Identifying consensus on activities that underpin value-based healthcare in outpatient specialty consultations, among clinicians. {Author}: van Engen V;Bonfrer I;Ahaus K;Buljac-Samardzic M; {Journal}: Patient Educ Couns {Volume}: 109 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 04 2023 {Factor}: 3.467 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.pec.2023.107642 {Abstract}: To find a consensus on clinicians' and patients' activities that underpin an ideal value-based outpatient specialty consultation, among clinicians.
A three-round online Delphi study was conducted. A purposive sample of nineteen clinicians from a Dutch university hospital judged activities on importance. Consensus was defined at 80% agreement. Activities were thematically analyzed to derive conceptual themes.
The expert panel agreed on 63 activities as being important for an ideal value-based outpatient specialty consultation and two activities as being unimportant. They failed to reach a consensus on 11 activities. Conceptual themes for activities that were considered important regard: 1) empowerment, 2) patient-reported biopsychosocial outcomes, 3) the patient as a person, 4) the patient's kin, 5) shared power and responsibility, 6) optimization, 7) coordination, 8) therapeutic relationships, and 9) resource-consciousness.
A value-based outpatient specialty consultation requires contextual decision-making, is person-centered, and focusses attention on care optimization and intelligent resource allocation. No importance is attributed to healthcare's societal burden and climate footprint. Disparities existed in various areas including the role of patient reported experience measures, "patient-like-me" data, and healthcare costs.
This study contributes a toolbox to guide and evaluate clinicians' and patients' behaviors in value-based outpatient specialty consultations and reveals opportunities to enhance facilitation.