Matters of Engagement examines issues at the intersection of health, health care and society. Including: how people in Canada access and experience health care service delivery and distribution; how those experiences impact both individual and community health; and the multitude of environmental, systemic, and political factors that favour some and disadvantage many. Jennifer Johannesen and Emily Nicholas Angl produce each episode with the aim of illuminating difficult or confounding issues, to provoke much-needed critical dialogue among all stakeholders.
Episodes
Sunday Jul 19, 2020
Compensation, with Zal Press and Dawn P. Richards
Sunday Jul 19, 2020
Sunday Jul 19, 2020
How to compensate patient partners, and under what circumstances, has long been a topic of debate among patient partners, researchers, and engagement professionals. Join us as we speak with Zal Press and Dawn P. Richards, co-authors (with Isabel Jordan and Kimberly Strain) of "Patient partner compensation in research and health care: the patient perspective on why and how." They share their experiences and perspectives as long-time patient partners on both organizational committees and health research projects.
In this fascinating exploration with Zal and Dawn, we talk through some big ideas: patients conceptualized as part of the healthcare workforce; the historical roots of healthcare as a faith-based charitable enterprise; how patient partners are shouldering the burden for having awkward conversations about compensation; that compensation doesn't fix communication issues... and so much more!
Mentioned in this episode:
- Patient partner compensation in research and health care: the patient perspective on why and how, Richards et al
- Medieval Healthcare and the Rise of Charitable Institutions: The History of the Municipal Hospital, by Tiffany A. Ziegler
- Rethinking the patient: using Burden of Treatment Theory to understand the changing dynamics of illness, May et al
- Understanding the motivations of patients: A co‐designed project to understand the factors behind patient engagement, McCarron et al
Zal Press (Patient Commando) on Twitter
Dawn P. Richards on Twitter
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