Patient education for children with interstitial lung diseases and their caregivers: A pilot study |
| |
Authors: | Mandy Niemitz Miriam Schrader Julia Carlens Meike Hengst Claudia Eismann Lutz Goldbeck Matthias Griese Nicolaus Schwerk |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry/Psychotherapy, University Ulm Medical Centre, Ulm, Germany;2. Department for Pediatric Pneumology, Allergologssy and Neonatology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany;3. Dr. von Hauner Children´s Hospital, Department of Pediatric Pneumology, University Hospital Munich, German Center for Lung research (DZL), München, Germany |
| |
Abstract: | ObjectivePatient education in children with rare chronic diseases like children’s interstitial lung disease (chILD) remains a challenge.AimsTo develop and evaluate a component-based educational program for individual counselling and to improve patients’ and caregivers’ self-efficacy and treatment satisfaction. Furthermore, to create chILD-specific educational material and assess physicians’ satisfaction with the intervention as well as patients’ health-related quality of life (HrQoL).MethodsThe study was conducted in two German centers for pediatric pulmonology, as a single-group intervention with pre-post-follow-up design.ResultsParticipants (N = 107, age: M = 7.67, SD = 5.90) showed significant improvement of self-efficacy (self-report: t = 2.89, p < 0.01; proxy-report: t = 3.03, p < 0.01), and satisfaction (patients: t = 3.56, p = 0.001; parents t = 6.38, p < 0.001) with the medical consultations. There were no pre-post differences in HrQoL. Participants were highly satisfied with the material and the physicians with the program.ConclusionsThe chILD education-program is a promising strategy to improve patients’ and their parents’ self-efficacy and treatment-satisfaction. Specific effects of the intervention need to be determined in a randomized controlled trial.Practice implicationHealthcare providers managing pediatric patients with chILD, may choose to use a patient education-program specifically tailored to the needs of chILD patients and their families, such as the program described here, which is the first of its kind. |
| |
Keywords: | Corresponding author at: University of Ulm, Dept. of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry/Psychotherapy, Steinhoevelstr. 5, D-89075, Ulm, Germany. Children’s interstitial lung disease (chILD) Patient education Self-management Self-efficacy |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|