A Commitment to Experience Must Reach Across the Continuum of Care

A conversation on patient experience is not restricted to one care setting, nor should it be. People’s healthcare journeys are not singular instances, but most often a series of encounters that while perhaps separate operationally from the delivery side of care, all weave together to frame one experience for a patient, their family members and care partners. This special issue purposefully takes us outside the traditional conversation space for experience, looking at segments of the care continuum including primary care, ambulatory care, free clinics and even dental care and the use of non-traditional care methods such as telehealth and app-based technologies to reinforce positive experiences.
Related content
-
Culture & Leadership
Looking Back to Move Forward: The Next Decade and Beyond for Human Experience
This issue comes out at an important moment for the experience conversation. It was ten years ago from the publication date of this issue on April 30, 2014, that the first issue of Patient Experience Journal (PXJ) was released. PXJ was intended to be a gathering place. A virtual town square for the experience movement where
Learn more -
Culture & Leadership | Infrastructure & Governance | Staff & Provider Engagement
Ownership at the Frontline: Innovating an Experience Champions Program
Many patient experience teams are small, and it’s hard to do it all. Having an “Experience Champs” program allows us to have multiple hands with one voice influencing all locations. Experience Champs are made up of frontline staff members who are chosen by their leaders as passionate role models. During the last five years, the
Learn more -
Culture & Leadership | Quality & Clinical Excellence | Staff & Provider Engagement
Words Matter: The Transformative Power of Language for Empowering Care
The words you use with colleagues and clients/patients from initial engagement through every level of patient-centered care can have a profound impact on the patient experience and impact understanding, adherence to treatment regimens, and recovery. Which part of a person are you addressing, which aspect of the human brain are you seeking to engage, and
Learn more