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March 2013 (Volume 91)
Quarterly Article
Jessica N. Mittler
Grant R. Martsolf
Shannon J. Telenko
Dennis P. Scanlon
December 2024
Dec 19, 2024
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Context: Policymakers and practitioners continue to pursue initiatives designed to engage individuals in their health and health care despite discordant views and mixed evidence regarding the ability to cultivate greater individual engagement that improves Americans’ health and well-being and helps manage health care costs. There is limited and mixed evidence regarding the value of different interventions.
Methods: Based on our involvement in evaluating various community-based consumer engagement initiatives and a targeted literature review of models of behavior change, we identified the need for a framework to classify the universe of consumer engagement initiatives toward advancing policymakers’ and practitioners’ knowledge of their value and fit in various contexts. We developed a framework that expanded our conceptualization of consumer engagement, building on elements of two common models, the individually focused transtheoretical model of behavior and the broader, multilevel social ecological model. Finally, we applied this framework to one community’s existing consumer engagement program.
Findings: Consumer engagement in health and health care refers to the performance of specific behaviors (“engaged behaviors”) and/or an individual’s capacity and motivation to perform these behaviors (“activation”). These two dimensions are related but distinct and thus should be differentiated. The framework creates four classification schemas, by (1) targeted behavior types (self-management, health care encounter, shopping, and health behaviors) and by (2) individual, (3) group, and (4) community dimensions. Our example illustrates that the framework can systematically classify a variety of consumer engagement programs, and that this exercise and resulting characterization can provide a structured way to consider the program and how its components fit program goals both individually and collectively.
Conclusions: Applying the framework could help advance the field by making policymakers and practitioners aware of the wide range of approaches, providing a structured way to organize and characterize interventions retrospectively, and helping them consider how they can meet the program’s goals both individually and collectively.
Author(s): Jessica N. Mittler, Grant R. Martsolf, Shannon J. Telenko, and Dennis P. Scanlon
Keywords: consumer engagement, patient activation, health behavior, conceptual framework
Read on Wiley Online Library
Volume 91, Issue 1 (pages 37–77) DOI: 10.1111/milq.12002 Published in 2013