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Study Evaluating the Effect of Person-centred Care for Patients Admitted for Inpatient Care at an Internal Medicine Unit

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Gastrointestinal Diseases
Endocrine System Diseases
Interventions
Other: Person-centred inpatient care
Registration Number
NCT03725813
Lead Sponsor
Göteborg University
Brief Summary

Patients admitted to internal medicine care environments have complex care needs and must be treated as persons with resources and responsibilities. Person-centred care is defined as care in which the caregiver aims to get to know the patient as a person, and the care comprises a holistic approach to assess patients' needs and resources. There is strong motivation for future health care to transform into an approach that acknowledges and endorses every patient's resources, interests and needs. There is limited existing research on the benefit of implementing person-centred care in internal medicine care environments for all patients regardless of diagnosis or care pathway. Little is known about the effects of person-centred inpatient care on patients' satisfaction with care. This study includes adult patients admitted to an internal medicine inpatient unit regardless of reason for admission. The aim of the study is to evaluate effects of person-centred inpatient care on care processes, in terms of satisfaction with care and person-centred content in medical records and to evaluate effects on self-reported health and self-efficacy.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
177
Inclusion Criteria
  • acute or elective admission with a minimum projected in-hospital stay of 24 hours
  • age ≥ 18 years
  • conscious and alert, with no delay in response.
Exclusion Criteria
  • cognitive impairment or a judgment by the caregivers that inclusion was not in the best interests of the patient (e.g. end of life care, impaired psychological wellbeing).

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Person-centred inpatient carePerson-centred inpatient carePerson-centred inpatient care
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Person-centred content in medical recordsFrom date of admission until the date of discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

Degree of person-centredness in medical records

Satisfaction with care comprise patients' evaluations of caregivers' identity-oriented approach and the sociocultural atmosphere at the ward.From date of admission until the date of discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

The outcome is assessed with the questionnaire Quality from the Patient Perspective. The questionnaire comprises four dimension of with two dimensions is used: Identity-oriented approach (13 items) and the sociocultural atmosphere (5 items). One item from the medical competence subscale (effective pain relief) and one additional item on provision of information about medications is also used. Two kinds of assessments are being made at each item: whether things were being done (perceived reality) and whether the right things were being done (subjective significance). For the primary outcome only the assessments of perceived reality are being used. Items are rated on a four-point response scale ranging from 1 (do not agree at all) to 4 (completely agree). Each item also has a response option of "not applicable". Subscales can be reported item by item or combined in a subscale score (average of all responses within the subscale).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Self-reported health assessed with EQ-5D-5Lat the date of discharge, an average of 5 days after inclusion

Self-reported health is measured with the EuroQual-5Dimensions-5Levels questionnaire (EQ- 5D- 5L). The questionnaire comprises 1 item per dimension. The dimensions of importance for health which are included are; mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression. Patients rate each item on a scale ranging from 1 (no problems) to 5 (extreme problems/unable to). A unique health state is defined by combining 1 level from each of the 5 dimensions. The questionnaire also includes EQ-VAS, in which the patients grade their current health status on an analogue scale from 0 (worst health) to 100 (best health).

Clinical observations of pulse rateFrom date of admission until the date of discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

Frequency of documented pulse rate during hospitalization. The medical records are reviewed retrospectively.

Clinical observations of weightFrom date of admission until date of discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

Frequency of documented clinical observations of weight (kg) during hospitalization. The medical records are reviewed retrospectively.

Clinical observations of respiratory rateFrom date of admission until the date of discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

Frequency of documented clinical observations of respiratory rate during hospitalization. The medical records are reviewed retrospectively.

Level of general self-efficacy assessed with the General Self-Efficacy scaleat the date of discharge, an average of 5 days after inclusion

General self-efficacy measures confidence in one's ability to handle difficult challenges in life. It includes 10 items, which are rated on a four- point Likert scale giving a summary score of 40 for the total scale (10-40).

Body temperatureFrom date of admission until the date of discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

Frequency of documented clinical observations of body temperature (degrees celsius) during hospitalization. The medical records are reviewed retrospectively.

Quality of care assessed as documented information in medical records on current medication at a daily basis and at dischargeFrom date of admission until the date of the discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

All information in the medical records during hospitalization are reviewed retrospectively. Rating is made regarding the presence (yes or no) of information on current medication at a daily basis and at discharge.

Quality of care assessed as documented information in medical records on planned medical care at discharge.From date of admission until the date of discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

All information in the medical records during hospitalization are reviewed retrospectively. Rating is made regarding the presence (yes or no) of information on planned medical care at discharge.

Clinical observations of blood pressureFrom date of admission until the date of discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

Frequency of documented clinical observations of systolic and diastolic blood pressure during hospitalization. The medical records are reviewed retrospectively.

Physical and psychological wellbeing assessed with the Quality from the Patient Perspective questionnaireat the date of discharge, an average of 5 days after inclusion

Patients rated their physical and psychological wellbeing on two separate five-point Likert scales ranging from "very good" (5) to "very bad" (1). These two items are included in the Quality from the Patient Perspective questionnaire as two separate questions.

Quality of care measured with ratings of Medical-technical competence and physical conditions at the ward assessed with the questionnaire Quality from the Patient Perspective.From date of admission until the date of discharge, up to 60 days of hospitalization.

The questionnaire comprises four dimension of with the two rational dimensions was used for this specific aim: medical- technical competence (4 items) and physical-technical condition (3 items). Two kinds of assessments are being made at each item: whether things were being done (perceived reality) and whether the right things were being done (subjective significance). For this secondary outcome the assessments of perceived reality is being used. A four-point response scale ranging from 1 (do not agree at all) to 4 (completely agree) forms the basis of ratings, each item also had a response option of "not applicable". Subscales can be reported item by item or combined in a subscale score (average of all responses within the subscale).

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Department of Medicine, Sahlgrenska University Hospital

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Gothenburg, Sweden

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