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Nursing Discharge Teaching for Multimorbid Inpatients

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Chronic Disease
Interventions
Behavioral: Nursing discharge teaching
Registration Number
NCT04253665
Lead Sponsor
University of Lausanne
Brief Summary

The objective of this study is to estimate the effect size of a nursing discharge teaching intervention on multimorbid inpatients activation level, health confidence, readiness for hospital discharge, experience with discharge care and rate and time to 7-days readmission.

Detailed Description

Seniors returning home from hospital have to manage several chronic conditions in addition to their daily tasks. The teaching provided by nurses during hospitalization is essential care to prepare them to manage their health at home. Nevertheless, there is often a gap between professionals' belief that the teaching they have provided to patients has met their needs, and patients' perceptions of the relevance of the teaching content to their home situation. The time available to conduct this teaching is also short during the hospital stay and there is limited knowledge about how to adapt this teaching for patients who must manage multiple chronic conditions at the same time. Thus, there is a real need to develop and test a new teaching nursing intervention to prepare for the return home that takes into account the unique and complex needs and characteristics of patients with multiple chronic conditions. Tailoring teaching to seniors' life situation and level of activation (i.e., knowledge, skills and confidence in managing their health) would best meet the needs of these patients for managing their health at home. An intervention that takes these characteristics into account has been developed and will be tested in this study.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
225
Inclusion Criteria
  • 2 chronic diseases or more
  • Being discharged home
  • Able to speak, read and write in French
Exclusion Criteria
  • Insufficient capacity to consent assessed with the University of California San Diego Brief Assessment of Capacity to Consent (UBACC).

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Discharge teachingNursing discharge teachingReceiving tailored discharge teaching by nurses during hospital stay.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Patient Activation Measure (PAM)change from hospital admission to the day of discharge and 7-10 days after discharge

The patient activation measure (PAM) is a 13-item self-report questionnaire to measure patient activation level. Stages of activation are distributed as follows in the PAM items: items 1-2: believing an active role is important; items 3-8: having confidence and knowledge to take action; items 9-11: taking action; and items 12-13: continuing healthy behaviors under stress. PAM raw score can be calculated by adding all of the responses to the 13 questions. This score is then converted into an activation score ranging from 0 = no activation to 100 = high activation using a calibration table. Psychometric properties of the PAM in hospitalized multimorbid patients showed a satisfying reliability (Cronbach's alpha = 0.88) and a content validity index of 0.91.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Discharge Care Experiences Survey (DICARES)7-10 days after discharge

This 11-items instrument investigates three domains: coping after discharge (4 items), adherence to treatment (3 items) and participation in discharge planning (4 items). The answer for each item ranges from 1 ("Not at all") to 5 ("To a very large extent"), with higher scores indicating more positive experience. The psychometric evaluation of the DICARES in senior patients showed an excellent test-retest reliability (ICC = 0.76, CI 95%\[0.70, 0.82\]), satisfactory construct validity (r = 0.54, p \<0.01) and an acceptable internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.82).

Change in Health Confidence Score (HCS)change from hospital admission to the day of discharge and 7-10 days after discharge

The Health Confidence Score (HCS) is an easy-to-obtain proxy measure for the patient activation construct. The HCS is a short measure (4-items) of patients' confidence to manage their health and engage with healthcare providers. Four dimensions are explored: Knowledge, Self-management, Access to help, Shared decision-making. Items have four response options (3 = strongly agree, 2 = agree, 1 = neutral, 0 = disagree). Scores are reported for each item and the higher they are, the higher the confidence is. A summary score is calculated with a 13-point scale by adding the individual items scores, with a range from 0 (4×disagree) to the ceiling 12 (4×strongly agree). This instrument has good internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.82) and construct validity.

Readiness for Hospital Discharge Scale-Short Form (RHDS-SF)At the end of the hospital stay, an average of 7-10 days after admission

Readiness for hospital discharge is an estimate by the patient of having the ability to leave the hospital, to be ready to face the realities of everyday life at home and the needs generated by their new health condition. The Readiness for Hospital Discharge Scale-Short Form (RHDS-SF) is an eight items self-reported questionnaire. Four dimensions measure personal status, knowledge to manage the post-hospital period, the ability to adapt to new health needs and the expected support. Each item is scored on a Likert scale from 0 to 10, with the highest score indicating a better perceived readiness. A mean score greater than or equal to 7 indicates that the patient is ready for hospital discharge. Content and construct validity of the RHDS-SF are missing so far. Predictive validity was tested but results showed that the patient short form of the RHDS cannot predict 30-day readmissions and emergency department visits. The RHDS has a Cronbach's alpha of 0.79.

Readmission rate and time to readmission7-10 days after discharge

7-10-day readmission rate and time to readmission retrieved from medical charts

Trial Locations

Locations (3)

Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV)

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Lausanne, Switzerland

EHC (Hôpital de Morges)

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Morges, Switzerland

eHnv (Etablissements hospitaliers du nord vaudois)

🇨🇭

Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland

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