4.5 Article

The Use of Teach Back at Hospital Discharge to Support Self-Management of Prescribed Medication for Secondary Prevention after Stroke-Findings from A Feasibility Study

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare11030391

Keywords

health literacy; patient discharge; care transitions; rehabilitation; communication; medication adherence

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The study aimed to investigate the effectiveness of a structured discharge letter and the Teach Back method in improving understanding and adherence to prescribed medication for secondary prevention after stroke. Results showed that patients who participated in Teach Back had a significantly better understanding of medical treatment information at discharge. However, there were no differences between groups in terms of understanding health information and medication adherence.
The study aimed to investigate whether a structured discharge letter and the use of the person-centred communication method Teach Back for sharing information at hospital discharge could support perceived understanding and knowledge of and adherence to prescribed medication for secondary prevention after stroke. Data from a feasibility study of a codesigned care transition support for people with stroke was used. Patients who at discharge received both a structured discharge letter and participated in the person-centred communication method Teach Back (n = 17) were compared with patients receiving standard discharge procedures (n = 21). Questionnaires were used to compare the groups regarding perceived understanding of information about medical treatment, knowledge of information about medical treatment and medication adherence at 1 week and 3 months. There was a statistically significant difference in perceived understanding of information about medical treatment (p > 0.01) between the groups in favour of those who participated in Teach Back at the discharge encounter. No differences between groups were found regarding understanding health information about medical treatment and medication adherence. The results indicate that the use of Teach Back at the discharge encounter positively impacts perceived understanding of information about medical treatment in people with stroke. However, considering the nonrandomised study design and the small sample size, a large-scale trial is needed.

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