| Literature DB >> 33727799 |
Laura Medina-Perucha1, Pablo Gálvez-Hernández2,3, Ana García-Sangenís1,4, Ana Moragas5, Josep María Cots6, Anna Lanau-Roig6, Alícia Borrás2,7, Isabel Amo2, Nieves Barragán8, Ramon Monfá1,4, Carl Llor1,9, Anna Berenguera1,4,10.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Co-design processes with patients allow developing health education materials, that are adapted to the population's knowledge and use of language, to reduce inappropriate antibiotic use. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This study presents a co-design process of educational material with patients (over 18 years old) with a previous diagnosis of acute lower respiratory tract infection. The co-design was framed within a qualitative study (Phase I, interviews; Phase II, focus group) conducted in Barcelona between April and September 2019.Entities:
Keywords: acute respiratory infections; antimicrobial resistance; co-design; health education; primary healthcare
Year: 2021 PMID: 33727799 PMCID: PMC7954036 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S297581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Examples of Initial Suggestions and Changes Based on Participants’ Suggestions
| Areas of Improvement | Initial Suggestion (Draft) | Changes Based on Participants’ Suggestions |
|---|---|---|
| Content | What is a cough? | What is a cough? |
| What causes a cough? | Causes | |
| How long does a cough last? | To prevent infection | |
| Are antibiotics useful? | Remedies | |
| What can be done? | Need for antibiotics | |
| How to prevent transmission? | When to ask for help | |
| Over-the-counter medication | ||
| When to ask for help | ||
| Format | Leaflet | A4 sheet |
| Images lack of gender, age and ethnical diversity | Change images to ensure gender, age and ethnical diversity | |
| Small font size (point 9) | Increase Font size (point 14–18) | |
| Institutional logos are too big | Reduce size institutional logos | |
| Language | There is no difference made between “dry cough” and “wet cough” | Explain the differences between dry and wet cough |
| Use of the term “transmission” | Use the term “infect” | |
| Use of the term “airways spasm” | Use of the term “breathing difficulties” |