Educate the patient about their disease and discharge plan

by Lyle Fettig, MD

Have you ever discharged a patient from the hospital and had a gnawing feeling that maybe you could have done more to educate the patient about their disease, medications, and plan of care?

Probably so.  A recent survey published in the Archives of Internal Medicine tells us that this feeling is based in reality (I’m guessing that you already knew this) and that you are not alone.

The survey was conducted at a not-for-profit teaching hospital affiliated with Yale University School of Medicine and included 89 patients and 43 physicians of various levels of training (intern, resident, and attending).  Patients were interviewed on the day of discharge using the Picker Patient Experience Questionnaire and the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Hospital Survey.  Physicians were interviewed towards the end of their inpatient month.

Key results:

  1. Only 18% of patients knew the name of the physician in charge of their care (most physicians assumed the patient knew)
  2. 43% of patients could not state their reason for admission (most physicians assumed the patient understood diagnosis at least somewhat well)
  3. 90% of patients reported not being told about adverse effects of new medications
  4. Physicians were more likely to report that they occasionally spoke in front of patients without including them in the conversation
  5. 58% of patients described physician explanations as always comprehensible compared to only 9% of physicians
  6. Half of patients reported having anxiety or fears while hospitalized and of those half, 54% indicated that a physician never discussed these fears (while only 2% of physicians, ie one physician, reported never discussing fears)

Many of the results are subject to recall bias, perhaps especially physician responses.  However, the results are not surprising by any means and while the physicians seemed to have blind spots in some areas (especially in responding to emotion), some of the results suggest that the physicians know there areas in which they might improve (such as always explaining things comprehensibly).  Other questions could have been asked of patients, such as, “who will you call if you have questions regarding your care when you get home” or “has your follow-up plan been explained to you?” How often can patients correctly identify this information?

In the commentary, the authors suggest that providing visual/written materials may help improve matters, and there is research to support this.  Another obvious solution would be to dedicate more time to patient education.  The study was not conducted in a palliative care context but one might expect that in a palliative care population, the risk of leaving the hospital relatively uninformed is higher (controlling for communication effectiveness) due to the complexity of disease, greater risk of cognitive impairment, etc.  When seeing these patients, palliative care clinicians can do their other colleagues and learners a favor by teaching communications skills that we use every day, which can then be applied to all patient encounters.  For instance:

  • The Teach-Back Method:  All clinicians should use this routinely to make sure patients understand key information.  In a general medicine context, here’s some evidence that this method actually improves outcomes (not just comprehension) in diabetes management.
  • Family Meetings:  Get the patient’s family involved early and often.  I hypothesize that family education not only improves patient understanding (because families can reiterate what doctors have said to the bewildered and perhaps mildly delirious patient) but also once again may improve outcomes because who is going to help the patient with their care after discharge?
  • Address Emotion:  This study is more evidence that we are missing empathic opportunities.  Fearful patients don’t listen well.  Addressing emotions in care can reduce fear (sometimes), build trust, and make it more likely that the patient will hear the physician’s message.

It’s a chronic pet peeve of mine that patients don’t know their physician names and commonly don’t always understand the role of all individuals on the healthcare team (or at least the main players).  It’s by no fault of their own and I’m not sure what the solution is- I’ve thought about requesting pictures of members of the primary team to place in the patient’s room so that at least they are identifiable.  Maybe someone out there has done a QI project on this and can enlighten me.

Lyle Fettig is a palliative care physician who blogs at Pallimed.

Submit a guest post and be heard.

email

  • http://www.ethicalnag.org Carolyn Thomas

    Thank you for this very important message to physicians and all who care for patients.

    But I’m confused – “58% of patients described physician explanations as always comprehensible compared to only 9% of physicians”? Should those numbers be reversed? Do you mean “incomprehensible”?

    “Discharge plan”? What’s that? For many of us heart attack survivors, we are booted out the door and sent home while our heads are still spinning from learning the dreaded diagnosis. Believe me, remembering a doctor’s name (one of dozens of new faces suddenly hovering over us) is the least important thing on our minds during a terrifying and overwhelming health crisis. That’s if the doctor bothers to introduce himself/herself in the first place!

    The average length of hospital stay post-MI has now declined from approximately 12 days in the 80s to five days currently, say the authors of an Archives of Internal Medicine study.

    Ask any patient, and you’ll be told of interactions with docs, nurses and other hospital staff who don’t even maintain eye contact. Seriously. As I wrote in this open letter to all hospital employees after a particularly bizarre stress echocardiogram experience, we sometimes feel like a piece of meat on a slab – but worse, an INVISIBLE piece of meat! More at “Top 10 Tips For How To Treat Your Patients” at HEART SISTERS:
    http://myheartsisters.org/2010/11/02/how-to-treat-your-patients-reprint/

  • Sarah

    Not a hospitalization, just a minor procedure… I had a colonoscopy. Was picked up by a coworker and napped in the truck. Got to the job site, did just a little heavy lifting, ran around, had a beer afterwards. That evening I found in my bag a crumpled up piece of paper with a very wiggly version of my signature, stating that I understood I was not to run around, lift heavy things, or drink alcohol. Oops!

    In my case, it was funny and not a big deal. But I hope giving information to sedated patients is not a widespread practice.

  • http://www.preparedpatient.org Goldie Pyka

    “It’s a chronic pet peeve of mine that patients don’t know their physician names and commonly don’t always understand the role of all individuals on the healthcare team (or at least the main players).”

    The Health Behavior News Service, part of the Center for Advancing Health (www.cfah.org), published “Prepared Patient: Your Doctor’s Office, Demystified” in November. It explains who’s who at the doctor’s office and how to increase the likelihood you’ll get the answers and care you need during your appointment. Read the post and join the conversation at http://www.preparedpatientforum.org/organizing/droffice.cfm

Trending