Fantastic video!! Oh how caring the people at the WHO sound, they really want to help people. Like over the past few years. They saved so many lives! I'm desperate to roll my sleeve up again, you know, just incase. And to all those 'you know who's' the WHO saved lives and the figure of 17 million people worldwide who were injured or killed by the pointy thing, you are all lying. They would Never do that. Thanks WHO, and keep up with the great work that you do. ❤😊
Great initiative! Here is why: Country: The Netherlands Age: 46 I have been ill for 32 years Names of misdiagnoses: MS, thrombosis, whiplash, coronary issues, mental issues, chronic sinusitis, blabla, unknown muscle problems (nearly leading to an amputation) Name of proper diagnose: Lyme disease Amount of unnecessary tests: over 60 There has been no informed consent, apart from the alternative Lyme treatments Estimate of the amount of inappropriate health care: a few years Amount of positive test results for actual diagnose: 1 Outcome: I am either cured (or at least fully functioning) for the last ten years
I definitely agree this WHO initiative. I do support it, so I wrote the speech. ----------- Around the world, People are living longer but often with multiple disease and conditions that require care over many years Unfortunately, too many people are not informed or consulted in the care they receive. In some countries, only 1 in 3 people have the risks of their treatment explained to them. one in 5 people have at least one and necessary test and up to 40% of health spending is wasted due to in efficiency. Health care should not be like this. Remember. People live with their conditions 24/7 not only when they seek care. That's why people-centered care is so important. People-centered care means ensuring that health services are tailored to peoples' needs and provided in partnership with them rather than simply given to them. It means care where people, families and communities respected, informed, engaged, supported and treated with dignity and compassion. People-centered care can have lasting benefits. It improves the trust, experience and outcomes people have from care, the confidence and job satisfaction of health professionals and the quality and efficiency of health systems. People-centered care can increase access to health services and reduce unnecessary use of services. Ultimately, it means people get the right care at the right time in the right place. But too often, this type of care is not standard practice. Implementing people-centered care requires fundamental changes in our approach to health care. It means rethinking how health services are organized, manages, and delivered. It means shifting away from asking 'what is the matter with you?' to 'what matters to you?' Around world, the World Health Organization is working with countries to design health systems that put people and their needs at the center of care. Because that's the health care that everyone deserves.
This is really great! We agree. Putting the patient at the heart of a healthcare service can have such a big impact. By simply asking patients what is important to them, you can reveal so much!
What a great initiative, by having a health system that is focused around patient needs and 'people-centred care' more people should be able to have access to fundamental health care due to the savings made by eliminating 'wasted' or 'unnecessary' resources or testing. I think we can also relate this video to many different sectors, for example, education. If education was people-centred and provided in partnership with students, engaging, informing and supporting there could be a major break through of effective pedagogy in the 21st century.
My country South Africa is embarking on this role out called Universal health Coverage which is greatly needed; don't remember ever hearing about people-centered care in any communications.Feel it, people centered-care should be the back drop for Universal Health Coverage!!! Beautiful clip, straight to the point and self explanatory.
I agree with the video that many people are not informed or consulted in their care. It is not standard practice everywhere and it should be. As the video states, we need to change in the fundamentals and treat every person as a person and not just a sickness or statistic. Doing so can decrease the waste of unnecessary services or resources. People-centered care treats not just the immediate needs but those to improve healthy wellbeing. Healthcare should be a partnership, not just a right here, right now band-aide.
1:20 may be very opportunistic ...In South Africa it is not only about accessibility but Clinics being able to provide a suitable level of care which is delivered in time to effect those affected by disease. Absolutely critical within this presentation was the ENGAGEMENT and informing / directly or giving access to information and supported. Task shifting -- peer review #AI and ongoing population analytics will drive the right care at the the right time at the the right cost ... Prevention and comments like "what matters to you " is CRITICAL @Face_SA Vanessa Carter leading the initiative to engage and collaborate @aretahealth @slabbert_marc Virtual Hospitals , Telemedicine and Specialist networks will drive service rendering to patients regardless of their location .
I am a mum of a sufferer. 16 years of misdiagnosis by GPs with one in particular being downright offensive in his comments. Daughter is now 29. Various diagnosis looked at, it's a nightmare trying to research and self diagnose when your GPs dismiss it all. Various confections to complicate the matter. Now on a new treatment protocol. I am personally in the midst of contacting our MP to see what if anything he is prepared to do to get this out there, for the NHS to get off its backside and look at modern research and evidence instead of using outdated testing methods and ignoring the real evidence that the Lyme communities can supply. We can only live in hope, though the UK is a million miles away from providing solutions but I do think this current wave of action and shouting is at least publicising the issues sufferers, and their families, have to contend with.
Hear hear! Here is why: Country: The Netherlands Age: 47 I have been ill for 25 years Names of misdiagnoses: Fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, mental issues, irritable bowel syndrome, asthma Name of proper diagnose: Lyme disease Amount of unnecessary tests: over 50 There has been no informed consent, apart from the alternative Lyme treatments Estimate of the amount of inappropriate health care: 20 years Amount of positive test results for actual diagnose: 1 Outcome: I am still suffering from Lyme
Great message. However, people - person: The video uses the term “people” as the centre of care. The term people denotes "human beings in general or considered collectively" (Oxford languages). This is unfortunate because to reach a person-centred care the individual and not the group perspective is important. The everyday conditions, health goals etc. can differ on an individual level and partnerships in care need to develop on this individual level.
How I like to conceptualize "people" versus "person" centred care is recognizing "people" is inclusive of communal type cultures, not just individualistic cultures. The patient/client is still the focus of care, but "people- centred care" also is open to the idea that community or family involvement might need to also be included in the care journey depending on the patient/client's culture. This is big in western Canada where many of the Indigenous communities have community designated health representatives/spokespersons to advocate for a patient/client through the health system. It stems from the belief that an unwell person will not get well with the added stress of health systems, and the community must wrap around the person so they can focus on healing (amongst other beliefs- each community is diverse in their teachings and approaches).
Patients, staff members, nurses at the hospitals need the right support from National leaders and service owners ( private sector) . Put them first and they should be second to nothing!
Agreed. It's true that people are living longer with diseases, but what isn't being acknowledged here is that a lot of these diseases are expressions of the later stages of aging. I urge you to join the Healthspan & Biotech discord live chat (discord.gg/ftSbffu), it hosts scientists and many others in favour of alleviating the suffering of age-related decline.
The WHO did not develop this, it was started in the 60s for Psychiatric treatment in the US and then further developed in the 80s in the UK. As should happen in all professions, all the WHO is doing is disseminating best practice, not owning it.
I am sorry I may be out of topic but if someone could see this must help me to reach out IT'S ABOUT RACISM That people are talking more about it while the society is highly stratified not only on racism there are women segregation, kids segregation with same kind or adults, poor people segregation, some kind of workers or some institutions/organizations, religious segregation, early married or divorced women in the marriages, single moms to dads,some underdog workers of some companies and many more Which racism can only bring anger and tension and sometimes motivation a little rate gets low self esteem but those other discriminations can bring highly low self esteem to the matter of causing the improper working even lead to mental issues and disorders to the maximized rate can make suicidal attempts even conflicts and much more I don't say racism is not bad but I am saying we are paying much attention to racism and forgetting other stereotypes We must provide much education on people and providing platforms to the victims while prosecuting violences in such people While racism we must base on our systems of leaderships, up to institutes and organizations by putting strictly condition and providing conducive environments to the people concerned even to apply acts and laws to any type of segregation complaint after been investigated on These are mine, you can add and yours
Wait wait I don't remember I watch this video i only remember that I commented on TH-cam Video and they only have 6 commented videos over all not including this.
Fantastic video!! Oh how caring the people at the WHO sound, they really want to help people. Like over the past few years. They saved so many lives! I'm desperate to roll my sleeve up again, you know, just incase. And to all those 'you know who's' the WHO saved lives and the figure of 17 million people worldwide who were injured or killed by the pointy thing, you are all lying. They would Never do that. Thanks WHO, and keep up with the great work that you do. ❤😊
This is really beautifully done. This is the kind of world that I want to live in!
Great initiative! Here is why:
Country: The Netherlands
Age: 46
I have been ill for 32 years
Names of misdiagnoses: MS, thrombosis, whiplash, coronary issues, mental issues, chronic sinusitis, blabla, unknown muscle problems (nearly leading to an amputation)
Name of proper diagnose: Lyme disease
Amount of unnecessary tests: over 60
There has been no informed consent, apart from the alternative Lyme treatments
Estimate of the amount of inappropriate health care: a few years
Amount of positive test results for actual diagnose: 1
Outcome: I am either cured (or at least fully functioning) for the last ten years
Bj MILLER :
Health care was design with Diseases not people had it center
Nothing is more important and necessary than People centered care! Great!
@TheAudioVisualSuite This is the type of care we need!
I definitely agree this WHO initiative. I do support it, so I wrote the speech.
-----------
Around the world, People are living longer but often with multiple disease and conditions that require care over many years
Unfortunately, too many people are not informed or consulted in the care they receive.
In some countries, only 1 in 3 people have the risks of their treatment explained to them.
one in 5 people have at least one and necessary test and up to 40% of health spending is wasted due to in efficiency.
Health care should not be like this.
Remember.
People live with their conditions 24/7 not only when they seek care.
That's why people-centered care is so important.
People-centered care means ensuring that health services are tailored to peoples' needs and provided in partnership with them rather than simply given to them.
It means care where people, families and communities respected, informed, engaged, supported and treated with dignity and compassion.
People-centered care can have lasting benefits.
It improves the trust, experience and outcomes people have from care, the confidence and job satisfaction of health professionals and the quality and efficiency of health systems.
People-centered care can increase access to health services and reduce unnecessary use of services.
Ultimately, it means people get the right care at the right time in the right place.
But too often, this type of care is not standard practice.
Implementing people-centered care requires fundamental changes in our approach to health care.
It means rethinking how health services are organized, manages, and delivered.
It means shifting away from asking 'what is the matter with you?' to 'what matters to you?'
Around world, the World Health Organization is working with countries to design health systems that put people and their needs at the center of care.
Because that's the health care that everyone deserves.
99999900
This is really great! We agree. Putting the patient at the heart of a healthcare service can have such a big impact. By simply asking patients what is important to them, you can reveal so much!
What a great initiative, by having a health system that is focused around patient needs and 'people-centred care' more people should be able to have access to fundamental health care due to the savings made by eliminating 'wasted' or 'unnecessary' resources or testing. I think we can also relate this video to many different sectors, for example, education. If education was people-centred and provided in partnership with students, engaging, informing and supporting there could be a major break through of effective pedagogy in the 21st century.
How true!
My country South Africa is embarking on this role out called Universal health Coverage which is greatly needed; don't remember ever hearing about people-centered care in any communications.Feel it, people centered-care should be the back drop for Universal Health Coverage!!! Beautiful clip, straight to the point and self explanatory.
I agree with the video that many people are not informed or consulted in their care. It is not standard practice everywhere and it should be. As the video states, we need to change in the fundamentals and treat every person as a person and not just a sickness or statistic. Doing so can decrease the waste of unnecessary services or resources. People-centered care treats not just the immediate needs but those to improve healthy wellbeing. Healthcare should be a partnership, not just a right here, right now band-aide.
1:20 may be very opportunistic ...In South Africa it is not only about accessibility but Clinics being able to provide a suitable level of care which is delivered in time to effect those affected by disease. Absolutely critical within this presentation was the ENGAGEMENT and informing / directly or giving access to information and supported.
Task shifting -- peer review #AI and ongoing population analytics will drive the right care at the the right time at the the right cost ... Prevention and comments like "what matters to you " is CRITICAL @Face_SA Vanessa Carter leading the initiative to engage and collaborate @aretahealth @slabbert_marc
Virtual Hospitals , Telemedicine and Specialist networks will drive service rendering to patients regardless of their location .
Hi there, I would like to know if is it possible to download this video and publish it on the website of an Italian medical foundation?
I am a mum of a sufferer. 16 years of misdiagnosis by GPs with one in particular being downright offensive in his comments. Daughter is now 29. Various diagnosis looked at, it's a nightmare trying to research and self diagnose when your GPs dismiss it all. Various confections to complicate the matter. Now on a new treatment protocol. I am personally in the midst of contacting our MP to see what if anything he is prepared to do to get this out there, for the NHS to get off its backside and look at modern research and evidence instead of using outdated testing methods and ignoring the real evidence that the Lyme communities can supply. We can only live in hope, though the UK is a million miles away from providing solutions but I do think this current wave of action and shouting is at least publicising the issues sufferers, and their families, have to contend with.
from your text it is not clear what your daughter is suffering from
nice reminder in my practice..what matters to you and NOT what is matters with you
Hear hear! Here is why:
Country: The Netherlands
Age: 47
I have been ill for 25 years
Names of misdiagnoses: Fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, mental issues, irritable bowel syndrome, asthma
Name of proper diagnose: Lyme disease
Amount of unnecessary tests: over 50
There has been no informed consent, apart from the alternative Lyme treatments
Estimate of the amount of inappropriate health care: 20 years
Amount of positive test results for actual diagnose: 1
Outcome: I am still suffering from Lyme
i have a questions please. what is the commonly known name for patient-centered approach
Most relevant and inspiring !!
It iz exactly the need of the hour. All the stake holders must put best efforts to make this effort successful.
Great message. However, people - person: The video uses the term “people” as the centre of care. The term people denotes "human beings in general or considered collectively" (Oxford languages). This is unfortunate because to reach a person-centred care the individual and not the group perspective is important. The everyday conditions, health goals etc. can differ on an individual level and partnerships in care need to develop on this individual level.
How I like to conceptualize "people" versus "person" centred care is recognizing "people" is inclusive of communal type cultures, not just individualistic cultures. The patient/client is still the focus of care, but "people- centred care" also is open to the idea that community or family involvement might need to also be included in the care journey depending on the patient/client's culture. This is big in western Canada where many of the Indigenous communities have community designated health representatives/spokespersons to advocate for a patient/client through the health system. It stems from the belief that an unwell person will not get well with the added stress of health systems, and the community must wrap around the person so they can focus on healing (amongst other beliefs- each community is diverse in their teachings and approaches).
Patients, staff members, nurses at the hospitals need the right support from National leaders and service owners ( private sector) . Put them first and they should be second to nothing!
So many bots commenting on this claiming to have Lyme disease.
Excellent video that was to be translated into Spanish to facilitate access to the largest number of people
Agreed. It's true that people are living longer with diseases, but what isn't being acknowledged here is that a lot of these diseases are expressions of the later stages of aging. I urge you to join the Healthspan & Biotech discord live chat (discord.gg/ftSbffu), it hosts scientists and many others in favour of alleviating the suffering of age-related decline.
I'm doing a Power point about It for school😎
Very important!
awsome! Pedro from Brazil (Company: ePHealth Primary Care Solution)
Please, make this video in spanish!!
Agreed 💯
What is the summary of this video
The WHO did not develop this, it was started in the 60s for Psychiatric treatment in the US and then further developed in the 80s in the UK. As should happen in all professions, all the WHO is doing is disseminating best practice, not owning it.
Hi WHO.
Is 2022 now. I see People Centred and dont care.
What's going on??
I am sorry I may be out of topic but if someone could see this must help me to reach out
IT'S ABOUT RACISM
That people are talking more about it while the society is highly stratified not only on racism there are women segregation, kids segregation with same kind or adults, poor people segregation, some kind of workers or some institutions/organizations, religious segregation, early married or divorced women in the marriages, single moms to dads,some underdog workers of some companies and many more
Which racism can only bring anger and tension and sometimes motivation a little rate gets low self esteem but those other discriminations can bring highly low self esteem to the matter of causing the improper working even lead to mental issues and disorders to the maximized rate can make suicidal attempts even conflicts and much more
I don't say racism is not bad but I am saying we are paying much attention to racism and forgetting other stereotypes
We must provide much education on people and providing platforms to the victims while prosecuting violences in such people
While racism we must base on our systems of leaderships, up to institutes and organizations by putting strictly condition and providing conducive environments to the people concerned even to apply acts and laws to any type of segregation complaint after been investigated on
These are mine, you can add and yours
Why Gaza Hospitals are being attacked?
Is that has to do anything like not providing people centred care?
Unless the topic is vaccine policy, then forget this video, WHO believes the exact opposite.
Bj MILLER :
Health care was design with Diseases not people had it center
اگه دانشجوی علوم پزشکی تهرانی، سلام
im 15 years old
Wait wait I don't remember I watch this video i only remember that I commented on TH-cam Video and they only have 6 commented videos over all not including this.
lol