4.6 Article

Patient experiences of, and preferences for, surgical wound care education

Journal

INTERNATIONAL WOUND JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 5, Pages 1687-1699

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/iwj.14030

Keywords

patient education as topic; patient participation; surgical wounds; surveys and questionnaires; wounds and injuries

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The study aimed to understand how patients' experiences of surgical wound care discharge education influenced their ability to self-manage their surgical wounds. A telephone survey was conducted with 270 surgical patients, revealing that patients preferred verbal and written education from medical and nursing staff at discharge. Logistic regression analysis showed that patient participation in wound care decisions and discussions about pain management were predictive factors for their ability to manage wounds at home. The study highlights the importance of incorporating patient preferences and participation into discharge education practices to enhance patients' self-management.
The aim of this study was to describe patients' experiences of, and preferences for, surgical wound care discharge education and how these experiences predicted their ability to self-manage their surgical wounds. A telephone survey of 270 surgical patients was conducted across two hospitals two weeks after discharge. Patients preferred verbal (n = 255, 94.8%) and written surgical wound education (n = 178, 66.2%) from medical (n = 229, 85.4%) and nursing staff (n = 211, 78.7%) at discharge. The most frequent education content that patients received was information about follow-up appointments (n = 242, 89.6%) and who to contact in the community with wound care concerns (n = 233, 86.6%). Using logistic regression, patients who perceived that they participated in surgical wound care decisions were 6.5 times more likely to state that they were able to manage their wounds at home. Also, patients who agreed that medical and/or nursing staff discussed wound pain management were 3.1 times more likely to report being able to manage their surgical wounds at home. Only 40% (107/270) of patients actively participated in wound-related decision-making during discharge education. These results uncovered patient preferences, which could be used to optimise discharge education practices. Embedding patient participation into clinical workflows may enhance patients' self-management practices once home.

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