Patient comprehension of emergency department care and instructions: Are patients aware of when they do not understand?
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Engel KG
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Heisler M
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Dylan Smith
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Robinson, CH
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Forman, JH
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Peter Ubel
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Study objective: To be able to adhere to discharge
instructions after a visit to the emergency department (ED), patients
should understand both the care that they received and their discharge
instructions. The objective of this study is to assess, at discharge,
patients' comprehension of their ED care and instructions and their
awareness of deficiencies in their comprehension.
Methods: We
conducted structured interviews of 140 adult English-speaking patients
or their primary caregivers after ED discharge in 2 health systems.
Participants rated their subjective understanding of 4 domains: (1)
diagnosis and cause; (2) ED care; (3) post-ED care, and (4) return
instructions. We assessed patient comprehension as the degree of
agreement (concordance) between patients' recall of each of these
domains and information obtained from chart review. Two authors scored
each case independently and discussed discrepancies before providing a
final concordance rating (no concordance, minimal concordance, partial
concordance, near concordance, complete concordance).
Results: Seventy-eight
percent of patients demonstrated deficient comprehension (less than
complete concordance) in at least 1 domain; 51% of patients, in 2 or
more domains. Greater than a third of these deficiencies (34%) involved
patients' understanding of post-ED care, whereas only 15% were for
diagnosis and cause. The majority of patients with comprehension
deficits failed to perceive them. Patients perceived difficulty with
comprehension only 20% of the time when they demonstrated deficient
comprehension.
Conclusion: Many patients do not
understand their ED care or their discharge instructions. Moreover,
most patients appear to be unaware of their lack of understanding and
report inappropriate confidence in their comprehension and recall.
Related Topics:
Doctor-patient communication
Citation
(view)
Engel KG, Heisler M, Smith DM, Robinson, CH, Forman, JH, Ubel PA. Patient comprehension of emergency department care and instructions: Are patients aware of when they do not understand?. Annals of Emergency Medicine 2009;53(4):454-461.e15.
Dylan Smith, PhD
Dylan Smith studied social psychology at Arizona State University, where his work focused on interpersonal and intergroup relations and evolutionary psychology. His current research seeks to translate theoretical and methodological advances in the behavioral sciences to the study of health-related...
Peter Ubel, MD
Peter A. Ubel, MD, is Professor of Medicine and Professor of Psychology at the University of Michigan; a primary care physician at the Ann Arbor Veterans Affairs Medical Center; Associate Director of the Michigan Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars...