Research Methodologies

April 21, 2015

Why “Patient-Centricity” Requires Relationships

Most conversations at healthcare industry conferences center around “patient-centricity.” Yet everyone seems to define it differently.

Corey Schwartz

by Corey Schwartz

Managing Director at C Space

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patient2Photo credit: COD Newsroom


By Corey Schwartz

Corey Schwartz is the Managing Director of Communispace Health and will be presenting at IIeX Health 2015 about Why Relationships are Critical for Better Health Outcomes.

It seems like most conversations at healthcare industry conferences center around the notion of “patient-centricity.” Yet everyone seems to define it differently.

In reality, the term “patient-centricity” points to a fundamental flaw in our thinking – it artificially relegates (and inherently isolates) patients to a single focal point within a company. However, when we think about only patients as the epicenter of our practice, we are missing an opportunity to holistically understand all the factors that affect the patient.

“Patient-centricity” is about building real, ongoing relationships – not just with patients, but with all the people who nurture and support the patient journey. The doctors, nurses, caregivers, and pharmacists. The pharma companies, retailers, health insurers, medical device makers, and CPG manufacturers. It’s a complex, interconnected symbiosis that requires – and deserves – a deep and broad understanding of every stakeholder.

It’s through relationships that we are able to access and engage with the raw emotions, candid stories, challenges, triumphs, and day-to-day realities of everyone in the patient care ecosystem. Relationships shatter preconceived notions, challenge the status quo, and help us see the world – and the patients, customers, and employees living and shopping and working in it – in new and inspiring ways, spurring innovation and encouraging progress.

Relationships, especially long-term ones, create intimacy and authentic conversation. They get people talking, doing, and sharing with you in ways that you never imagined. For example, a real, ongoing relationship can reveal that nighttime is consistently the scariest time for a diabetic teenager and his mother. Insight like this can reveal the opportunities for numerous organizations – providers, payers, physicians, retailers, and more – to work towards improving outcomes.

When we’re in an honest relationship, we feel it. We can’t ignore it. We internalize it. And that goes for organizations, too. That empathetic gut-feeling gets internalized into the hearts and minds of people across every department – from insights to R&D to marketing to the C-level – guiding every decision and every action. When a company has ongoing access to first-hand accounts of a Parkinson’s patient’s daily struggles, for instance – that access spawns empathy and carries with it enormous power to galvanize alignment and incite action.

Even companies with the best intentions to be patient-led can still make decisions based on the company’s needs, not the patient’s. In the healthcare sector, especially, relationships with patients or physicians may seem scary or riddled with compliance issues. But they don’t have to be. Innovation, expertise, and regulatory prowess can lead to safe, systematic engagement. In reality, it’s scarier to innovate in silos, detached from the people you serve. So let them be your guide. Because your relationship with them is the truest and fastest way to “patient-centricity.”

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customer centricitycustomer experiencehealthcare research

Disclaimer

The views, opinions, data, and methodologies expressed above are those of the contributor(s) and do not necessarily reflect or represent the official policies, positions, or beliefs of Greenbook.

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