| Literature DB >> 19014552 |
Jorgen Urnes1, Hermod Petersen, Per G Farup.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient education has proved beneficial in several but not all chronic disease. Inconsistent findings may rely on varying educational effects of various programs and differential effects on subgroups of patients. Patients' increase in disease knowledge may serve as a feedback to the educator on how well the education program works - but may not be associated to relevant clinical outcomes like quality of life (QoL). This study aimed to investigate the effects of a group based education program for patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) on disease knowledge and the association between knowledge and QoL.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19014552 PMCID: PMC2596788 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-8-236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Socio-demographic and disease characteristics of patients allocated to GERD-education vs. control groups, recorded at baseline.
| Age, years | 47 (12) | 47 (14) |
| Sex (female) | 49% | 50% |
| Primary school only | 31% | 34% |
| Cohabitating | 77% | 80% |
| Blue-collar worker | 22% | 22% |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 26 (3.6) | 26 (4.7) |
| Previous history of serious disease | 14% | 17% |
| Length of GERD history (months) | 166 (151) | 169 (154) |
| Esophagitis | 60% | 51% |
| Having used H2-blocker or PPI | 72% | 63% |
| Ranitidine responder | 41% (n = 74) | 47% (n = 71) |
| Somatic comorbidity | 53% | 54% |
| Psychiatric comorbidity | 8% | 10% |
Continuous variables are means (SD), categorical variables are percentages.
Figure 1Knowledge test scores at 2 and 12 months follow-up for educated patients (edu) and patients allocated to control (contr). Plots show median (--), mean (- -), interquartile range (box) and 10th/90th (whiskers) percentiles. Diff. = difference in means.
Multiple linear regression analysis of knowledge test scores at 2 and 12 months follow-up as dependent variables and independent variables at baseline which correlated with knowledge test score at p < 0.2
| Allocation to education group | 3.6 | 0.29 | 2.7 | |||
| Formal educational level | 1.1 | 0.06 | 1.2 | |||
| GHQ-score at time of inclusion | - 0.1 | 0.08 | - 0.2 | |||
| Psychiatric disease at time of inclusion | - 1.6 | 0.02 | - 1.5 | |||
| R2 (adjusted) for the model | 0.44 | 0.36 | ||||
1 Variables excluded in both models: Previous history of serious disease, esophagitis, having used PPI or H2-blocker, DSIQ sum-score, global QoL.
Associations between change in GERD-knowledge from 2 to 12 months follow-up and change in QoL-scores (DSIQ and GHQ-30 and their subscales).
| 0.2 (0.18) | 0.2 (0.18) | 0.1 (0.59) | 0.3 (0.10) | 0.02 (0.84) | 0.3 (0.13) | 0.44 (0.25) | 0.38 (0.46) | 0.30 (0.50) | 0.8 (0.06) | 0.2 (0.60) | 0.03 (0.15) | |
| 0.1 (0.65) | 0.0 (1.0) | 0.2 (0.51) | 0.1 (0.66) | 0.05 (0.76) | 0.02 (0.57) | 0.6 (0.16) | - 0.8 (0.22) | 0.8 (0.22) | 0.2 (0.49) | 0.04 (0.08) | ||
| 0.5 (0.09) | 0.07 (0.81) | - 0.01 (0.95) | - 0.04 (0.96) | - 0.43 (0.63) | - 0.2 (0.79) | 0.2 (0.81) | - 0.04 (0.95) | 0.0 (0.92) | ||||
Numbers are β-values (p) in linear regression analyses adjusted for selected baseline variables (see text) with change in GERD-knowledge as dependent variable. Positive numbers indicate a reduced quality of life with increasing GERD-knowledge. β-values (p < 0.05) are in bold.