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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Quality Improvement Initiative About Patient Engagement With Clinicians in a Community Hospital

Simpson, Cheryl 01 January 2017 (has links)
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a global health problem and efforts are needed to improve the care of individuals affected by the disease. A recent strategy for improving care within the healthcare system is patient engagement. Nurses and other health care clinicians can apply patient engagement into their clinical practice to improve the care they provide to their patients. Therefore, the purpose of this project was to increase the knowledge and awareness of patient engagement among clinicians who work with CKD patients. This quality improvement project used Lewin's force field analysis to analyze driving and restraining forces to help develop and implement strategies to develop an e-learning module. The project used practice-focused questions to determine if knowledge about patient engagement and the Shared End-Stage Renal Patients - Decision Making Tool could improve staff knowledge and awareness about patient engagement. A quantitative pretest, posttest approach was used to compare pretest scores to posttest scores after the e-learning module was viewed. Nine clinicians participated in the project study. Results showed that clinicians' knowledge and awareness about patient engagement increased from a mean pretest score of 5.22 to a mean posttest score of 6.22, (p = 0.08617). The sample of only 9 participants may have contributed to the lack of statistical significance after viewing the educational presentation. The e-learning module will provide positive social change as staff and students of renal programs learn about and apply the principles of patient engagement to their clinical practice.
12

Improving the Patient Experience with Communication

Salmon, Pauline Adora 01 January 2020 (has links)
A quality patient experience is one of the highest priorities for hospitals as patients and families are looking to healthcare providers to meet their demands for quality service. The Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey measures the extent to which providers effectively communicate pertinent information such as communication about medications. On a 20-bed intermediate care unit, the HCAHPS item scores relating to nurse communication and communication about medicine were inconsistent and, on most occasions, were below the comparison benchmark of the 50th percentile when compared to other like hospitals. The purpose of this quality improvement project guided by the patient-centered care model, needs based theory, and adult learning theory, was to test the impact of an educational module for nurses on best practices for teaching patients about medications. Thirty nurses consented to participate in the teach-back sessions. Results of the pre- and posttest, evaluating the nurses' knowledge and attitude about teach-back, were analyzed using the Wilcoxon Signed Ranks test and findings showed an improvement in knowledge scores (z = -2.833, p = .005). However, no statistically significant changes occurred in nurse attitudes toward teach-back. A comparison of descriptive HCAHPS scores on communication about medications and nurse communication showed that scores improved from a low of 58% top box to 74% after the teach-back education. These findings indicated that using teach-back could enhance communication about medications. Effectively communicating pertinent health information using teach-back may have significant consequences for nurse-patient-family engagement contributing to positive social change.
13

The Impact of Engagement Strategies on the Reduction of Patient Falls

Martin, Rosemary 01 January 2017 (has links)
Despite the availability of many fall prevention measures, many patients fall in U.S. hospitals each year. Experts view patient fall rates as the measure that can be most affected by a nurse-led, evidence-based intervention. The purpose of this quality improvement project was to implement and evaluate the impact of patient engagement strategies on patient compliance to fall prevention education and the reduction of falls. The quality improvement framework used for this project was the Iowa Model. Interventions for this project included patient engagement strategies including the teach-back (TB) method and video-based fall prevention education paired with the project site's existing fall prevention program. A prospective quantitative design was used to answer the practice-focused question of whether the implementation of a falls protocol incorporating patient engagement strategies improves patient compliance with the fall prevention plan of care and reduces patient falls. A total of 58 patients were included in this project, conducted from July to October 2017. The results showed a 75% reduction in the fall rate compared to the same three month period in 2016. This finding suggests that reinforcement of oral and written instruction through video education follow-up and the use of the TB method to assess patient understanding are effective measures to reduce patient falls and increase patient compliance to the fall prevention plan of care. These patient engagement strategies can be replicated by nurses in similar acute care settings. Adoption of such evidence-based changes in nursing practice may improve patient safety and decrease harm in hospital settings as implications for positive social change.
14

The Effects of Engaging Surgical Patients and Families in a Fall Prevention Plan

Thompson, Tiffany D. 26 April 2023 (has links)
No description available.
15

Patient and Family Engagement and Resource Production in Learning Health Networks

Dunn, Maureen 23 August 2022 (has links)
No description available.
16

Researching nurses' use of digital technology during the COVID-19 pandemic

Dowding, D., Skyrme, S., Randell, Rebecca, Newbould, L., Faisal, M., Hardiker, N. 15 June 2023 (has links)
Yes / The adoption of digital technology by nurses accelerated during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. However, not all nurses were familiar with the various digital systems used in their organisations and there were reports of digital technology not being fit for purpose. This article describes a service evaluation that used an online survey to obtain nurses' feedback on the digital systems used to support patient care during the pandemic. Fifty-five respondents provided details about 85 separate digital systems. The usability of these systems varied significantly across technology types, while barriers to their use included nurses' lack of digital literacy and inadequate access to IT infrastructure. However, most of the nurse respondents felt that digital technology had supported effective patient care during the COVID-19 pandemic.
17

Empathy : its significance and monitoring in the dietetic consultation for chronic disease management

Parkin, Tracey January 2012 (has links)
Communication between the patient and healthcare professional is pivotal in enabling effective self-care management to occur (Street et al., 2009) which in turn leads to improved health outcomes (Kravitz et al., 1993). However, there is little published data exploring the most effective tools for evaluating whether these communication skills occur and what particular attributes enhance the process (Goodchild, Skinner & Parkin, 2005; Heisler et al., 2003; Parkin & Skinner, 2003). This study aims to identify patient-centred communication skills occurring in consultations and to explore their link with a tool-recording agreement on reported decisions made. Quantitative analysis was conducted on 86 dietetic consultations across four outpatient diabetes services. Audio recordings from 20 of these were qualitatively analysed. Greater agreement on reported decisions correlated significantly with level of empathy demonstrated (t = .283, p = .0005). In consultations featuring agreement, dietitians expressed more empathy (p = .02), used more active listening skills, asked significantly more exploratory questions on self-care practices (U = 18.5, p = .007), provided significantly more supportive/collaborative information-giving exchanges (U = 11, p = .003) and were more likely to set an agreed agenda at the start of consultations. In contrast, consultations featuring disagreement had low levels of empathy, fewer active-listening skills and exploratory questions, significantly greater numbers of persuasive information-giving exchanges (U = 17, p = .007) and more recommending exchanges. Generally, agendas were not set. In conclusion, recording patient/healthcare professional agreement on reported decisions made during a consultation is a simple tool that can indicate the presence of patient-centred communication skills. Active-listening skills allow expressions of empathy that facilitate patient involvement and interactive dialogue. The measure of agreement should be used frequently as a marker of effective dietetic consultations and to provide further data on the relationship between patient-centred communication and implementation of behaviour change for improved health outcomes.
18

IL COINVOLGIMENTO DEL PAZIENTE NEL PROCESSO DI CURA: VERSO UNA RIDEFINIZIONE DELL'ETICA E DELLA PROFESSIONALIZZAZIONE MEDICA NELL'ERA DELLA MEDICINA PARTECIPATIVA / PATIENT HEALTH ENGAGEMENT: REDEFINING ETHICAL AND MEDICAL PROFESSIONALISM IN THE ERA OF PARTICIPATORY MEDICINE

BARELLO, SERENA 12 March 2015 (has links)
In un contesto in cui il coinvolgimento e la partecipazione dei consumatori/clienti di prestazioni sanitarie è oggi più che mai all’ordine del giorno, il concetto di “patient engagement” si è sempre più imposto nella letteratura scientifica e manageriale come call to action in risposta alle sfide epidemiologiche – legate all’aumento della cronicità – ed economiche – connesse all’aumento dei costi sanitari e alla riduzione delle risorse disponibili - a cui i sistemi sanitari contemporanei devono necessariamente rispondere per evitare il collasso. Per ciò, a fronte di una letteratura sul tema ancora parziale e frammentata, definire il concetto di “patient engagement” e le sue implicazioni a vari livelli diviene cruciale per passare da una dichiarazione di intenti ad una concreta strategia di azioni volte a promuoverlo. Alla luce di queste premesse, il progetto di ricerca ambisce a rispondere ad una necessità fondativa sia da un punto di vista teroico che empirico di questo concetto e ad evidenziare possibili linee di sviluppo e ricadute applicative per una rinnovata professionalizzazione dei clinici che devono oggi riadattare le proprie pratiche professionali e ripensare alla propria identità in funzione di un paziente sempre più attivo e partecipe rispetto alle scelte legate alla gestione della propria salute. / The expectancy of patient living with chronic disease has improved significantly in the recent years due to advances in medical sciences. To address the burden of this growing demand of care, patient engagement is considered crucial as it contributes to improve health outcomes and control healthcare costs. However, many gaps still exist for its implementation starting from the lack of a shared definition and shared guidelines for medical practice based on the direct patients' care experience. In the light of this premises this dissertation will propose a sequential research design generally aimed at improving the knowledge and understanding of patient engagement and its implications for the medical practice and professionalism. To answer the overall aim of this thesis both literature reviews and qualitative methodology were used. Chapter 1 was aimed to set scene and give the readers an overview of the global cultural and societal scenario that justifies the need to deal with the topic of patient engagement. Chapter 2 and 3 consist in in-depth literature reviews aimed at shading light on the concepts featuring the participatory medicine movement and, more specifically, the one of patient engagement. An in-depth qualitative study according to the grounded theory principles was conducted and reported in chapter 4 and was aimed at deepening the heart failure patient’s perspective towards engagement in their care in order to build and experience-based model of this phenomenon. The last two chapters, based on the insights emerged from both the literature analysis and the grounded theory study, were aimed at discussing the implications of patient engagement for the clinical decision making process (chapter 5), and for training health professionals in patient engagement strategies and improving the effectiveness of their communication and relational habits with this aim (chapter 6).
19

Shared decision making via personal health record technology as normalized practice for youth with Type 1 diabetes

Davis, Selena 04 September 2018 (has links)
Engaging youth with Type 1 diabetes (T1D) in the self-management of daily tasks and decision- making provides opportunities for positive health outcomes. However, emerging adulthood and care transitions are associated with decreased clinic attendance and diabetes complications. The process of shared decision making (SDM) comprises four key elements – acknowledge, consider, decide, act - and is identified as an optimal approach to making self-management decisions, yet it has been difficult to implement in practice. Personal health record (PHR) technology is a promising approach for overcoming such barriers. Still, today PHRs have yet to root themselves into care and present an opportunity for improvement in SDM and engagement in self-management decision making. Using a sequential two-phased investigation, this dissertation describes how PHRs can be designed to enable SDM and integrated into clinical practice to engage youth with T1D in self-management decision making. Phase 1 proposed an integrated SDM–PHR (e-PHR) functional model justified by youth with T1D (n=7) and providers (n=15) via a user-centered design approach. Located within an interconnected EHR ecosystem, e-PHR integrates 23 PHR functionalities for the SDM process, whereby each SDM element was mapped to PHR functions with a moderate level of agreement between patients and providers (Cohen's kappa 0.60-0.74). The Phase 2 mixed methods, pre-implementation evaluation utilized an online measurement instrument and survey and individual interviews, underpinned by the Normalization Process Theory (NPT), to describe the four cognitive and behavioural processes (coherence, cognitive participation, collective action, reflexive monitoring) known to influence the success of complex socio-technical implementations. Youth with T1D (n=8), providers (n=11), and EHR/clinical leaders (n=8) in British Columbia participated. Reliability tests of NPT-based instrument negated the use of scores for the coherence and reflexive monitoring constructs. Qualitative results indicated that e-PHR made sense as explained by two themes for ‘Coherence’: game changing technology and sensibility of change. Participants strongly agreed (mean score=4.6/5) with ‘Cognitive Participation’ processes requiring an investment in commitment, explained by two themes: sharing ownership of the work and enabling involvement. Weak agreement (mean score=3.6/5) was observed with ‘Collective Action’ processes requiring an investment in effort, explained by one theme, uncovering the challenge of building collective action, and 3 sub-themes, assessing fit, adapting to change together, and investing in the change. Participants appraised e-PHR as explained by two themes for ‘Reflexive Monitoring’: reflecting on value, and monitoring and adapting. Finally, participants strongly agreed (mean score=4.5/5) that e-PHR would positively affect engagement in self-management decision making in two themes: care is efficient and care is person-centred. The establishment of a e-PHR functional model is a precursor to system design requirements. Using the NPT framework, findings from the process evaluation indicated participants invest in sense-making, commitment and appraisal work of this technology. However, successful integration of e-PHR into clinical practice to positively affect engagement in self-management decision making will only be attained when systemic effort is invested to enact it. Further research is needed to explore this gap to inform priorities and approaches for future implementation success. / Graduate
20

Motivational Interviewing to Promote Patient Engagement and Self-Care Within an Enhanced Recovery After Surgery for Cesarean Birth Pathway

Niemi, Marcie E. 06 April 2023 (has links)
No description available.

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