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Mid‐term report on St Luke’s College of Nursing’s 21st century Center of Excellence Program: Core elements and specific goals of people‐centered care
Author(s) -
KOMATSU Hiroko
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
japan journal of nursing science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.363
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 1742-7924
pISSN - 1742-7932
DOI - 10.1111/j.1742-7924.2006.00050.x
Subject(s) - excellence , empowerment , sustainability , long term care , center of excellence , order (exchange) , core (optical fiber) , product (mathematics) , sociology , nursing , psychology , public relations , medical education , medicine , engineering , computer science , business , political science , ecology , telecommunications , geometry , mathematics , finance , database , law , biology
Aim: This paper, at the halfway point of the 5 year Center of Excellence (COE) Program, aims to extract common core elements of each COE project working on the development of people‐centered care and to clarify future issues related to the COE Program through the evaluation of those elements. Methods: All data obtained in such research activities, including records, interviews, meeting minutes, and results, are shared for each project in COE section meetings or general assemblies and the findings that are established there are accumulated. We also have set up a working group to develop the people‐centered care concept by continuously reviewing the core elements of people‐centered care based on the collected data. In order to track the projects in an orderly manner, we classified and organized the activities of the 11 COE projects based on the Process Evaluation Model and reviewed common important elements. Results: The characteristic components, related to participation, relationships, capacity‐building, empowerment, and product (specific achievements), were extracted as common core elements of each COE project. Conclusion: In order to maintain the sustainability of people‐centered care incorporated in communities, concrete strategies for improving economic efficiency, social significance and utility, and evaluation methods need to be developed.