| Literature DB >> 27536077 |
Christina Riechel1, Anna Christina Alegiani1, Sascha Köpke2, Jürgen Kasper3, Michael Rosenkranz4, Götz Thomalla1, Christoph Heesen5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Risk knowledge and active role preferences are important for patient involvement in treatment decision-making and adherence. Although knowledge about stroke warning signs and risk factors has received considerable attention, objective knowledge on secondary prevention and further self-esteem subjective knowledge have rarely been studied. The aim of our study was to investigate knowledge and treatment decisional role preferences in cerebrovascular patients compared to controls.Entities:
Keywords: cerebrovascular patients; decisional role preferences; knowledge; stroke
Year: 2016 PMID: 27536077 PMCID: PMC4977072 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S98342
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Demographic data
| Demographic data | Patients (n=253) | Controls (n=274) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age (years) | 64 (SD 11.4) | 57 (SD 15.7) | <0.001 |
| Female | 72 (27.5%) | 163 (59.5%) | <0.001 |
| History of stroke | 171 (67.6%) | 17 (6.2%) | <0.001 |
Note:
Fisher’s exact test.
Abbreviation: SD, standard deviation.
Stroke knowledge
| Stroke knowledge | Patients (n=262) | Controls (n=274) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| General stroke knowledge | |||
| Impaired vision is an acute stroke symptom | 220 (84%) | 242 (88%) | 0.168 |
| Ischemic stroke caused by artery occlusion | 253 (97%) | 265 (97%) | 1.000 |
| Stroke caused by hemorrhage | 190 (73%) | 203 (74%) | 0.697 |
| Emergency call in case of mild symptoms | 208 (79%) | 215 (78%) | 0.833 |
| Knowledge on stroke risk | |||
| Treatment of diabetes reduces stroke risk | 56 (21%) | 94 (34%) | 0.001 |
| Effectiveness of aspirin for prevention | 26 (10%) | 41 (15%) | 0.090 |
| Cardiac arrhythmias increase stroke risk | 112 (43%) | 122 (45%) | 0.728 |
| Knowledge about pathological blood pressure | 107 (41%) | 99 (36%) | 0.287 |
| Medical data interpretation | 111 (42%) | 117 (43%) | 0.938 |
Notes: Data shown are number of correct responses (%).
Fisher’s exact test.
Univariate and multivariate regression analysis of determinants of stroke knowledge
| Predictor | Summarized questions of knowledge (corrected | |
|---|---|---|
| Univariate regressions | ||
| Education | 0.007 (0.002) | 0.230 |
| Age | 0.027 (0.026) | <0.001 |
| Sex | <0.001 (0.002) | 0.699 |
| Autonomy preference | 0.004 (0.001) | 0.202 |
| Study cohort | <0.001 (0.002) | 0.699 |
| Numeracy | 0.028 (0.027) | <0.001 |
| Multivariate regression | ||
| All six predictors | 0.037 (0.004) | 0.351 |
Note:
Analysis of variance.
Subjective and objective stroke knowledge
| Stroke knowledge | Patients | Controls | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective stroke knowledge | 6.3±2.5 | 5.2±2.6 | <0.001 |
| Objective stroke knowledge | 3.9±1.0 | 3.8±1.1 | 0.107 |
| 0.282 (<0.001 | 0.332 (<0.001 |
Notes: Values are mean ± SD; R= bivariate Pearson correlation coefficient.
Unpaired t-test.
Abbreviation: SD, standard deviation.
Figure 1Frequencies of first choice preferred roles by patients.
Reaction on warning signs (patient subgroup n=96)
| Assumed action | Call an ambulance | Visit general practitioner | Notify relatives | Wait |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Symptom | ||||
| Hemiparesis and aphasia | 86 (91%) | 2 (2%) | 7 (7%) | 0 |
| Aphasia | 22 (69%) | 5 (16%) | 1 (3%) | 4 (12%) |
| Paresthesia | 63 (66%) | 22 (23%) | 6 (6%) | 5 (5%) |
| Dizziness, nausea, vomiting | 67 (70%) | 25 (26%) | 3 (3%) | 1 (1%) |
| Loss of vision in one eye | 45 (47%) | 43 (45%) | 3 (3%) | 5 (5%) |
| Severe headache | 62 (66%) | 28 (30%) | 2 (2%) | 2 (2%) |
| Known headache | 6 (6%) | 57 (60%) | 5 (5%) | 28 (29%) |
| Chest pain | 82 (86%) | 10 (11%) | 2 (2%) | 1 (1%) |
| Abdominal pain and nausea | 16 (17%) | 67 (72%) | 2 (2%) | 8 (9%) |
Notes: 96% completed the questionnaire. n = number of responses (%).