Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03117179 |
Other study ID # |
PI2013_843_0012 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
November 26, 2013 |
Est. completion date |
August 25, 2019 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2023 |
Source |
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Amiens |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Each year more than 15 million French people visit the emergency services and almost 80% of
them come out without hospitalization after having undergone a clinical examination and
possibly additional examinations.
Description:
Each year more than 15 million French people visit the emergency services and almost 80% of
them come out without hospitalization after having undergone a clinical examination and
possibly additional examinations.
Following their discharge, compliance with discharge requirements and recommendations
(treatment, monitoring, follow-up, etc.) is a determining factor in improving their health.
Non-membership is linked to an increase in morbidity, mortality and use of the health system.
Patient adherence to discharge instructions is conditional on patient understanding.
Unfortunately, the environment of an emergency service often creates conditions for
information and education of the patient that are often far from optimal or at least that are
specific to a typical consultation.
Data from the international literature showed that 78% of people who come out of emergency
after consultation do not clearly understand the instructions and only 20% are aware of their
lack of understanding. Waisman et al. Documented that 25% of patients did not understand
their diagnosis and that 13% to 18% did not understand treatment instructions. Heng et al.
Have shown that patients leaving after head trauma are unable to cite the symptoms that
should prompt them to consult quickly.
The involvement of healthcare teams to inform patients with the help of different
communication media is therefore particularly important in trying to improve understanding
and adherence to exit instructions. However, Zavala et al. Point to the fact that this is not
necessarily sufficient.
Some authors have identified factors of poor adherence: multiple chronic diseases, multiple
drug treatments, psychiatric disorders, but also age, social isolation, depression, quality
of life and socio-economic and cultural level , A low level of health literacy, or planned
medical follow-up, the severity of the pathology and the perception of that severity by the
patient, or the patient's dissatisfaction with medical instructions.
The patients' adherence to the literature is evaluated in a varied manner according to the
pathologies concerned: counting the number of tablets; Patient self-tracking log; Reports
from physicians, reports by third parties (such as the patient's spouse); Electronic
measurements (for example, metered-dose inhalers or electronic drop dispensers); Blood or
urine dosage. The different methods used have advantages and disadvantages that need to be
assessed according to the needs of the study we wish to implement. While declarative
investigations in the assessment of patient adherence are criticized, no method has
unfortunately been used as a benchmark for assessing adherence. The bibliographic search did
not find any questionnaires that had been validated in this context. In order to evaluate the
adhesion, the investigator will therefore opt for a semi-directed interview at D7 in order to
better control a possible bias of memorization. This tool has known limitations including a
tendency to overestimate adhesion, because patients tend to respond to what doctors want to
hear. This will be taken into account in the interpretation of the results.