Affiliation:
1. Department for Small Animals, Veterinary Faculty Leipzig University Leipzig Germany
2. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine Technische Universität Dresden Dresden Germany
3. Institute for Medical Informatics, Statistics and Epidemiology Leipzig University Leipzig Germany
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundIt is not known how much information clients retrieve from discharge instructions.ObjectiveTo investigate client's understanding of discharge instructions and influencing factors.AnimalsDogs and cats being hospitalized for neurological diseases.MethodsClients were presented questionnaires regarding their pet's disease, diagnostics, treatments, prognosis and discharge instructions at time of discharge and 2 weeks later. The same questions were answered by discharging veterinarians at time of discharge. Clients answered additional questions regarding the subjective feelings during discharge conversation. Data collected included: data describing discharging veterinarian (age, gender, years of clinical experience, specialist status), data describing the client (age, gender, educational status). Raw percentage of agreement (RPA) between answers of clinicians and clients as well as factors potentially influencing the RPA were evaluated.ResultsOf 230 clients being approached 151 (65.7%) and 70 (30.4%) clients responded to the first and second questionnaire, respectively (130 dog and 30 cat owners). The general RPA between clinician's and client's responses over all questions together was 68.9% and 66.8% at the 2 time points. Questions regarding adverse effects of medication (29.0%), residual clinical signs (35.8%), and confinement instructions (36.8%) had the lowest RPAs at the first time point. The age of clients (P = .008) negatively influenced RPAs, with clients older than 50 years having lower RPA.Conclusions and Clinical ImportanceClients can only partially reproduce information provided at discharge. Only clients' increasing age influenced recall of information. Instructions deemed to be important should be specifically stressed during discharge.
Reference16 articles.
1. Increasing Adherence in Practice: Making Your Clients Partners in Care
2. Effect of veterinarian-client-patient interactions on client adherence to dentistry and surgery recommendations in companion-animal practice
3. Difficulties experienced by veterinarians when communicating about emerging zoonotic risks with animal owners: the case of Hendra virus;Mendez DH;BMC Vet Res,2017
4. Pet owner study: communication key driver to improved animal care;Schultz K;North Olmstead,2007
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献