Improving Patient Understanding of Emergency Department Discharge Instructions.

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Sarah Russell, Nancy Jacobson, Ashley Pavlic
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Previous studies have shown that patients in the emergency department (ED) are frequently given incomplete discharge instructions that are written at least four grade levels above the recommended sixth-grade reading level, leading to poor understanding. Our aims in this study were to implement standardized discharge instructions containing six key components written at a more appropriate reading level for common emergency department (ED) diagnoses to improve patient understanding.

Methods: We conducted this study in a 20-bed ED at an urban Veteran's Administration hospital. Data was collected via in-person patient and clinician interviews. Patient interviews were conducted after patients received their discharge instructions. We compared patient responses to clinician responses and marked them as incorrect, partially correct, or correct with a score of 0, 0.5, or 1, respectively. The maximum possible score for each interview was six. Six key components of discharge instructions were asked about: diagnosis; new medications; at-home care; duration of illness; reasons to return; and follow-up. There were 25 patients in the pre-intervention group and 20 in the intervention group with the standardized set of instructions. We performed a Mann-Whitney U test on the total interview scores in the control and intervention groups and conducted a sub-analysis on the individual scores for each of the six key components.

Results: The patients in the intervention demonstrated a statistically significant increase in patient-clinician correlation when compared to the patients in the pre-intervention group overall (P < 0.05), and two of the six key components of the discharge instructions individually showed statistically significant increase in patient-clinician correlation when standardized discharge instructions were used.

Conclusion: Patients who received the standardized discharge instructions had improved understanding of their discharge instructions. Future opportunities extending off this pilot study include expanding the number of diagnoses for which standardized instructions are used and investigating patient-centered outcomes related to these instructions.

提高病人对急诊科出院须知的理解。
导读:先前的研究表明,急诊科(ED)的患者经常得到不完整的出院说明,这些说明的书写水平至少比推荐的六年级阅读水平高出四个等级,导致理解不佳。我们在这项研究中的目的是实施标准化的出院指南,其中包含六个关键部分,以更适合普通急诊科(ED)诊断的阅读水平编写,以提高患者的理解。方法:我们在一家城市退伍军人管理局医院的20个床位的急诊科进行了这项研究。通过对患者和临床医生的面对面访谈收集数据。在患者收到出院指示后进行患者访谈。我们将患者的反应与临床医生的反应进行比较,并分别以0分、0.5分或1分将其标记为不正确、部分正确或正确。每次面试的最高分是6分。出院说明的六个关键组成部分被问及:诊断;新的药物;家庭护理;患病时间;回归的理由;和随访。干预前组25例,标准化指导组20例。我们对对照组和干预组的总访谈得分进行了曼-惠特尼U测试,并对六个关键组成部分的每个得分进行了子分析。结果:与干预前组患者相比,干预组患者与临床医生的相关性总体上有统计学意义的提高(P)。结论:接受标准化出院指导的患者对出院指导的理解有所提高。扩展这一试点研究的未来机会包括扩大使用标准化指导的诊断数量,并调查与这些指导相关的以患者为中心的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.20%
发文量
125
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.
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