| Literature DB >> 21599943 |
Sabine Lins1, Andrea Icks, Gabriele Meyer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence-based patient and consumer information (EBPI) is an indispensable component of the patients' decision making process in health care. Prevention of accidental falls in the elderly has gained a lot of public interest during preceding years. Several consumer information brochures on fall prevention have been published; however, none fulfilled the criteria of an EBPI. Little is known about the reception of EBPI by seniors. Therefore we aimed to evaluate a recently developed EBPI brochure on fall prevention with regard to seniors' acceptance and comprehensibility in focus groups and to explore whether the participants' judgements differed depending on the educational background of the study participants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21599943 PMCID: PMC3118104 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2318-11-26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Pool of EBPI categories [2].
| - | Content of information and meta-information |
| - | Quality of evidence |
| - | Patient-oriented outcome measures |
| - | Presentation of numerical data |
| - | Verbal presentation of risk |
| - | Diagrams, graphics and charts |
| - | Loss and gain framing |
| - | Pictures and drawings |
| - | Patient narratives |
| - | Consideration of cultural aspects |
| - | Layout |
| - | Language |
| - | Development process |
Chapters and Content of the Evidence-Based Patient Information Brochure on Risk of Accidental Falls.
| One (6 pages) | Introduction | Narrative | Meta-information (e.g.: information about the authors, sponsoring or financial support, global aim of the publication, sources of information used, publication date), development process |
| Two (6 pages) | Definition of falls, fall prevalence in different groups (age, gender) | Narrative, bar chart, tables, line graphs, summary | Presentation of numerical data, diagrams, graphics and charts, patient narratives, layout, language |
| Three (13 pages) | Identifying the individual risk of falling | Narrative, case story, individual risk of falling table with confidence intervals, nomogram, summary | Presentation of numerical data, verbal presentation of risk, diagrams, graphics and charts, patient narratives, layout, language |
| Four (17 pages) | Fall preventive interventions | Narrative, case story, drawings, pictograph, table displaying the number need to treat (NNT), summary | Content of information, quality of evidence, patient-oriented outcome measures, presentation of numerical data, verbal presentation of risk, diagrams, graphics and charts, loss and gain framing, pictures and drawings, patient narratives, layout, language |
| Five (1 page) | Final remarks, offering the opportunity to give feedback, referral to the following chapters | Narrative | Not addressed by EBPI categories |
| Six (3 pages) | Further literature and contact persons | Narrative | Meta-information |
| Seven (5 pages) | Glossary | Narrative | Language |
| Eight (3 pages) | References | Narrative | Meta-information |
Participants' characteristics (n = 40).
| Women | 31 (78) |
| Mean age (range), yrs. | 75 (60-89) |
| Living alone | 22 (55) |
| Education | |
| none | 1 (2.5) |
| secondary modern school (graduation after 9 school years, lower than a high school diploma) | 16 (40) |
| high-school diploma | 12 (30) |
| college qualification | 1 (2.5) |
| general qualification for university entrance | 8 (20) |
| other | 2 (5) |
| Professional education | |
| none | 2 (5) |
| semiskilled | 5 (12.5) |
| vocational training | 27 (67.5) |
| university | 6 (15) |
| Current employment status and source of income | |
| ≥ part-time position | 1 (2.5) |
| yes, additional income to the old age pension | 1 (2.5) |
| no, housewife/house husband | 7 (17.5) |
| no, pension | 30 (75) |
| no, other | 1 (2.5) |
| Occupational* | |
| Blue-collar employee | 4 (10) |
| (weekly contract and temporary workers) | |
| White-collar employee | 25 (62.5) |
| (permanent salaried employees) | |
| civil servant | 6 (15) |
| self-employed | 3 (7.5) |
| other | 1 (2.5) |
| Current net income in EUR† | |
| ≥ 1000 | 13 (32.5) |
| 1000 € to 2000 | 11 (27.5) |
| 2000 € to 3000 | 8 (20) |
| 3000 € to 4000 | 4 (10) |
* One missing value.
† Four missing values.
Codes defined by elements of Evidence-Based Patient Information Brochure on Risk of Accidental Falls and codes identified through focus group discussions.
| Codes generated from pre-defined topics of the brochure (sub-codes) | Codes emerged during focus group discussions |
| Cover picture, layout, chapter 1 (including sub-code: meta-information and development process), table one, figure one, chapter 2 (including the sub-code: fall prevalence), table two, figure two, chapter 3 (including the sub-code: case story), table three, nomogram, chapter 4, table four, pictogram, further literature and contact persons, glossary, overall acceptance (including the sub-code: practical advice), expectations to the brochure, recommendation of the brochure, emotional reactions | Marginal notes, routes of dissemination; facilitators target group, usage of 1000 persons as denominator |
Likert scale rating of the brochure's chapters.
| 2.68 | 4.04 | 2.64 | 2.20 | 1.17 | 2.88 | 2.00 | 3.83 | |
| 2.75 | 3.55 | 2.07 | 2.33 | 2.00 | 2.00 | 3.33 | 4.00 | |
| 2.87 | 3.90 | 3.36 | 2.00 | 1.75 | 2.25 | 3.00 | 3.83 | |
| 2.48 | 2.70 | 2.86 | 1.75 | 1.83 | 2.25 | 2.00 | 4.00 | |
| 2.29 | 2.10 | 2.36 | 2.00 | 2.08 | 2.00 | 2.00 | 3.50 | |
| 2.43 | Missing value* | 3.00 | 2.00 | 2.00 | 1.75 | 2.00 | 3.83 | |
1 = very good, 2 = good, 3 = satisfactory, 4 = adequate, 5 = inadequate, 6 = insufficient.
* Not available since the investigator failed to ask participants.
Figure 1Pre-test-post-test probability of falling using a Fagan nomogram. Red arrow = LR+ 2; black arrows = 95% confidence interval 1.5-2.7. Original in German [32]