| Literature DB >> 28778168 |
Marge Benham-Hutchins1, Nancy Staggers2, Michael Mackert3, Alisha H Johnson4, Dave deBronkart5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient-centered care promotes the inclusion of the most prominent and important member of the health care team, the patient, as an active participant in information exchange and decision making. Patient self-management of a chronic disease requires the patient to bridge the gap between multiple care settings and providers. Hospitalizations often disrupt established self-management routines. Access to medical information during hospitalization reflects patients' rights to partner in their own care and has the potential to improve self-management as well as promote informed decision making during and after hospitalization. The objectives of this study were to elicit the perspectives of patients with chronic disease about desired medical information content and access during hospitalization.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic disease; Communication; Health literacy; Hospitalization; Nursing; Patient participation; Patients; Qualitative research; Self-care; Self-management
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28778168 PMCID: PMC5544974 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2487-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Open ended and limited response questions
| • How well was your medical care organized while you were in the hospital? |
| • How often did your providers seem to know what they needed to know about you, your medical care, and what you needed? |
| • Please share how you keep track of your health information as you go from provider to provider and setting to setting. |
| • Please share how you keep track of your health information while you are in the hospital. |
| • What kinds of medical information are you interested in knowing about when you are in the hospital? |
| • What medical information do you prefer not to know about when you are in the hospital? |
| • Did the nurses give a change of shift report in your hospital room? |
| • During your hospitalization, did your doctors and other providers discuss your medical care as a group (medical rounds) in your hospital room? |
| • When you first got home from the hospital, how confident were you that you knew what you would need to do to take care of your medical needs? |
| • As time went by (a week or more after discharge), did you find that you actually did know what you needed to do to take care of yourself? |
| • Did you find that you had the things you needed -- equipment, prescriptions, or anything else? |
| • Did you find that you did know what to do if problems developed? |
| • Did you find that you got the help you needed, when you needed it? |
| • Thinking back on your hospitalization, is there anything else that you think could be done during hospitalization to help prepare you to resume self-care after you went home? |
Hospital setting and region
| United States Regions | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Northeast | Midwest | South | West | Total | ||
| Setting | Urban | 4 | 5 | 10 | 3 | 22 |
| Rural | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| Suburban | 1 | 1 | 6 | 2 | 10 | |
| Total | 5 | 6 | 17 | 5 | 33 | |
Themes and categories with code frequencies
| Themes and categories | Frequencies | |
|---|---|---|
| Theme | Code | |
| Caring for myself | 148 | |
| Care coordination | 38 | |
| Discharge information | 22 | |
| Provider contact post discharge | 29 | |
| Self-Care | 59 | |
| I want to know everything | 97 | |
| Communication - inpatient | 25 | |
| Here is the information I want | 72 | |
| Include me during handoffs and rounds | 49 | |
| Bedside shift report: barriers and facilitators | 19 | |
| Medical rounds: barriers and facilitators | 30 | |
| What I expect | 83 | |
| Communication - interprofessional | 23 | |
| Patient expectations: care process | 26 | |
| Patient perception of provider knowledge and recommendation | 34 | |
| You’re not listening | 87 | |
| Communication - patient-provider | 53 | |
| Invisible patient | 17 | |
| Listen to the patient | 17 | |
| Tracking my health information | 69 | |
| Information tracking: inpatient | 28 | |
| Information tracking: outpatient | 41 | |
| Total | 533 | |
Provider behaviors that discourage patient participation
| “…talking around the computer in hushed tones, not directly addressing the patient, lack of eye contact.” [F, 20, 108] | |
| “…disinterest and lack of time.” [F, 56, 113] | |
| “Speaking as if the patient is not there, using jargon and acronyms, condescension of any sort.” [F, 37, 111] | |
| “Arrogance. Seeming to be in a hurry and believing they know what you feel.” [F, 67, 120] | |
| “Treating the patient as a number and not a person.” [F, 37, 133] | |
| “…too many people in the patient’s room.” [F, 35, 135] |