病人和护理团队对支持 "在家入院 "决策的应用程序的看法。

Justin Kramer, Marc Kowalkowski, Kelly Reeves, Tara Eaton, Shih-Hsiung Chou, Stephanie Murphy, Colleen Hole, Asha Ganesan, Andrew McWilliams
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:美国各地都在使用 "居家医院"(Hospital at Home,HaH)项目,该项目有利于在患者最舒适的环境中为患者提供护理服务,并释放住院床位。医疗系统应优先考虑让患者更好地了解 HaH 计划,同时促进共同决策 (SDM)。SDM 应用程序可促进患者对复杂的 HaH 护理决策的参与和理解。我们之前开发、测试并改进了一款HaH SDM应用程序:评估 SDM 应用程序在帮助肺炎患者入院治疗时的实用性:利用可用性调查(16 人)以及对患者(9 人)和护士导航员(3 人)的半结构式访谈,评估我们的应用程序在帮助肺炎患者考虑入院治疗时的作用。我们在美国东南部的三家医院进行了招募。对调查问卷的分析与其验证措施一致,而对访谈则采用归纳编码方法进行分析:患者支持通过应用程序接收哈医大一院的信息,许多患者指出,通过多种方式(如视频、图片、文字)展示内容很有帮助,应用程序有助于他们做出护理决定。在应用程序的引导下询问患者的护理偏好有助于患者直观地了解自己的优先事项,增强患者的代入感,同时为护理团队提供重要信息。参与者认为视觉效果能有效传达项目细节,例如 HaH 的居家设置,这可能有助于解决健康知识普及方面的难题。潜在的障碍包括需要扩大应用程序对视力受损和非英语患者的可及性:SDM应用程序可为患者的HaH护理决策提供更好的信息,使患者能够自主获取信息并参与可视化内容,从而解决与健康知识普及和驾驭复杂、时效性强的决策相关的挑战。
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Patient and care team perspectives on an app to support Hospital at Home admission decision making.

Background: Hospital at Home (HaH) programs are used throughout the United States and are beneficial in both providing patients care in environments most comfortable to them and freeing up inpatient beds. Better informing patients about HaH programs, while promoting shared decision-making (SDM), should be prioritized by health systems. SDM apps may promote increased patient agency and understanding of complex HaH care decisions. We previously developed, usability tested, and refined a HaH SDM app.

Objectives: To evaluate the utility of SDM apps in assisting pneumonia patients with HaH admission.

Methods: Usability surveys (N = 16) and semistructured interviews with patients (N = 9) and nurse navigators (N = 3) were utilized to evaluate our app in assisting pneumonia patients as they contemplated HaH admission. Recruitment occurred at three hospitals in the southeastern United States. Surveys were analyzed consistent with their validated measures, while interviews were analyzed using inductive coding methodologies.

Results: Patients supported receiving HaH information via an app, with many noting that presenting content via multiple modalities (e.g., videos, pictures, text) was helpful and that the app assisted their care decision. App-guided inquiries into patients' care preferences helped patients visualize their priorities and promoted feelings of agency, while providing important information to care teams. Participants found visuals effective at conveying program details, for example, HaH's in-home setup, which may assist with health literacy challenges. Potential barriers included the need to expand app accessibility for vision impaired and non-English speaking patients.

Conclusions: SDM apps may better inform patients' HaH care decisions, allowing patients self-directed access to information and engagement with visual content, which may address challenges related to health literacy and navigating complex, time-sensitive decisions.

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