Reviewing Models of Patient Advocacy: Current Successes and Future Directions for Applying Community Health Workers and Patient Advocates to Advance Health Equity

Introduction: Health equity interventions aim to mitigate health inequities with evidence-based approaches. Patient advocacy is one such approach, and its goal is to empower patients to make informed decisions about how they engage their health care with support from a liaison between the health car...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andrew Simkus, Kristen Holtz, Nicole Wanty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mary Ann Liebert 2024-12-01
Series:Health Equity
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/heq.2023.0191
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850031421628874752
author Andrew Simkus
Kristen Holtz
Nicole Wanty
author_facet Andrew Simkus
Kristen Holtz
Nicole Wanty
author_sort Andrew Simkus
collection DOAJ
description Introduction: Health equity interventions aim to mitigate health inequities with evidence-based approaches. Patient advocacy is one such approach, and its goal is to empower patients to make informed decisions about how they engage their health care with support from a liaison between the health care team and the patient. While nurses have predominantly held this role, community health workers (CHWs) and patient peer advocates (PPAs) are also now being used as patient advocates to help lead patient-centered interventions. Studies have demonstrated that both CHWs and PPAs can benefit patient outcomes. Methods: In this article, we compare these two types of patient advocacy models and suggest that the differences between them may make them particularly useful for addressing different barriers to care among patients. We briefly review studies looking at the strengths of these two types of advocacy models and describe the only article we identified comparing the use of CHWs with PPAs, although even this was among differing intervention designs. Implications for Future Research: It is important for research to begin comparing the efficacy of these two models among congruent interventions to unveil which type of patient advocate has the strongest impact in alleviating particular barriers to care and enhancing patient health outcomes. By identifying the most efficacious type of patient advocate across different roles and settings, interventions will hopefully be better informed and more effective in achieving health equity.
format Article
id doaj-art-5c6c36cfb9cd4b2380d2b1bdfe71f980
institution DOAJ
issn 2473-1242
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Mary Ann Liebert
record_format Article
series Health Equity
spelling doaj-art-5c6c36cfb9cd4b2380d2b1bdfe71f9802025-08-20T02:58:58ZengMary Ann LiebertHealth Equity2473-12422024-12-018184985510.1089/heq.2023.0191Reviewing Models of Patient Advocacy: Current Successes and Future Directions for Applying Community Health Workers and Patient Advocates to Advance Health EquityAndrew Simkus0Kristen Holtz1Nicole Wanty2KDH Research & Communication, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.KDH Research & Communication, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.KDH Research & Communication, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.Introduction: Health equity interventions aim to mitigate health inequities with evidence-based approaches. Patient advocacy is one such approach, and its goal is to empower patients to make informed decisions about how they engage their health care with support from a liaison between the health care team and the patient. While nurses have predominantly held this role, community health workers (CHWs) and patient peer advocates (PPAs) are also now being used as patient advocates to help lead patient-centered interventions. Studies have demonstrated that both CHWs and PPAs can benefit patient outcomes. Methods: In this article, we compare these two types of patient advocacy models and suggest that the differences between them may make them particularly useful for addressing different barriers to care among patients. We briefly review studies looking at the strengths of these two types of advocacy models and describe the only article we identified comparing the use of CHWs with PPAs, although even this was among differing intervention designs. Implications for Future Research: It is important for research to begin comparing the efficacy of these two models among congruent interventions to unveil which type of patient advocate has the strongest impact in alleviating particular barriers to care and enhancing patient health outcomes. By identifying the most efficacious type of patient advocate across different roles and settings, interventions will hopefully be better informed and more effective in achieving health equity.https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/heq.2023.0191patient advocacyadvocatepeercommunity health workerhealth equityCHW
spellingShingle Andrew Simkus
Kristen Holtz
Nicole Wanty
Reviewing Models of Patient Advocacy: Current Successes and Future Directions for Applying Community Health Workers and Patient Advocates to Advance Health Equity
Health Equity
patient advocacy
advocate
peer
community health worker
health equity
CHW
title Reviewing Models of Patient Advocacy: Current Successes and Future Directions for Applying Community Health Workers and Patient Advocates to Advance Health Equity
title_full Reviewing Models of Patient Advocacy: Current Successes and Future Directions for Applying Community Health Workers and Patient Advocates to Advance Health Equity
title_fullStr Reviewing Models of Patient Advocacy: Current Successes and Future Directions for Applying Community Health Workers and Patient Advocates to Advance Health Equity
title_full_unstemmed Reviewing Models of Patient Advocacy: Current Successes and Future Directions for Applying Community Health Workers and Patient Advocates to Advance Health Equity
title_short Reviewing Models of Patient Advocacy: Current Successes and Future Directions for Applying Community Health Workers and Patient Advocates to Advance Health Equity
title_sort reviewing models of patient advocacy current successes and future directions for applying community health workers and patient advocates to advance health equity
topic patient advocacy
advocate
peer
community health worker
health equity
CHW
url https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/heq.2023.0191
work_keys_str_mv AT andrewsimkus reviewingmodelsofpatientadvocacycurrentsuccessesandfuturedirectionsforapplyingcommunityhealthworkersandpatientadvocatestoadvancehealthequity
AT kristenholtz reviewingmodelsofpatientadvocacycurrentsuccessesandfuturedirectionsforapplyingcommunityhealthworkersandpatientadvocatestoadvancehealthequity
AT nicolewanty reviewingmodelsofpatientadvocacycurrentsuccessesandfuturedirectionsforapplyingcommunityhealthworkersandpatientadvocatestoadvancehealthequity