Title: Information Needs of Myocardial Infarction Patients
1Information Needs of Myocardial Infarction
Patients
2The Aims of the Study
- Evaluate patients perceptions of the importance
to them of items commonly taught post MI - To compare these perceptions with those of the
nurses who care for them - To compare the perceptions among the nurse groups
themselves (CCU, ward, Rehab)
3The Sample
- 27 patients post first MI at one Dublin hospital
- All CCU nurses at this hospital (27)
- All cardiac ward nurses at this hospital (27)
- Cardiac rehabilitation nurses in Ireland (35)
4The instrument The Cardiac Patients Learning
Needs Inventory (CPLNI)
- Devised by Gerard Peterson (1984) USA
- Orignal questionnaire had 8 categories,
containing 43 individual items pertaining to
usual teaching areas. - The respondent is invited to respond to each
individual item within the category using a five
point likert scale to determine strength of
agreement with each statement.
5The Cardiac Patients Learning Needs Inventory
(CPLNI)
- Cardiovascular Anatomy Physiology (AP)
- Psychological factors
- Risk Factors
- Information about Medications
- Dietary Information
- Physical Activity
- Miscellaneous information
- Introduction to the Coronary Care Unit CCU
6The Cardiac Patients Learning Needs Inventory
(CPLNI)
- Gerard Peterson (1984) USA
- Karlik Yarcheski (1987) USA
- Wingate (1990) USA
- Chan (1990) USA
- Ashton (1997) USA
- Turton (1998) UK
- Hughes (2000) UK
7Summary of Previous Results of the CPLNI
- All areas were rated as important
- Learning about anatomy and physiology were deemed
important both during hosptial stay after
discharge - Psychological factors were often regarded as
being of moderate importance particularly after
discharge - Risk factors/ lifestyle factors emerged as of
primary concern to patients in all studies
8Summary of Previous Results of the CPLNI
- Medication information was regarded as an
important area for learning at most times during
recovery. - Information regarding diet and activity was rated
as important for learning, however both areas
were considered to be of low priority when rank
order was considered.
9Variations between patient and nurse perceptions
- Nurses ranked medication information needs as
priority learning - Nurses ranked medication information needs as
being of greater importance than risk factor/
lifestlye needs (CCU nurses ranked medicaton
information needs higher than non CCU nurses) - Nurses percieved the individual item of
resuming sexual activity to be high prority
learning area, however, patients placed low
priority on this topic.
10CPLNI Used in the Study
- Categories reduced by 1,an additional category
added ( symptom management), items reduced from
43 to 38 (6 added). Turton (1998) - Term risk factor was substituted with lifestyle
factor, as patients appeared to misinterpret the
former.
11Results- patients
- significantly different than nurses (p0.001)
- Mostly accounted for by a large proportion of NI
responses by the patients, in contrast to the
nurses, to three main (Physical Activity) items
when to resume driving, sexual activity, and
work. - Most similar to the CCU nurse
- The mean score of the Physical Activity category
is significantly smaller than any other category,
this was not the case for any of the nurse groups - Patients overall mean score was significantly
smaller than any of the nurse groups
12Results- Nurses
- The divergence of the distributions of the 3
nurse groups was significant (p0.033) - The CCU nurses had a lower overall score mainly
due to lower scores in categories 2 3
(Psychological factors Lifestyle factors) - Lifestyle medication also significantly higher
than 3 lowest mean scores
13Comparison of Nurse Patient Views
- Score of symptom management significantly
exceeds the mean scores of all other other
categories - Both nurses and patients agreed that symptom
management was of greatest importance when rank
order was considered - Categories 3 (lifestyle) 4 (medication) were
also ranked highly by all groups - Analysis reveals that all groups had similar
priorities, but patients scores were generally
lower
14Comparison of Nurse Patient Views
- 4 individual items were scored highest or nearly
highest by all - What to do if I get chest pain
- What the signs symptoms of a heart attack are
- When to call a GP or ambulance
- What I can do to reduce the chances of me having
another heart attack - Biggest disagreement on items, scored lower by
patients than any other items. - When I can resume driving
- When I can resume sexual activity
15Changes in patient scores
- Of the 27 patients, 18 were re-administered the
questionnaire on self-completion basis at home
following discharge. - No overall change in score
- On Psychological factors there was a
significant mean score increase of 0.35,
(P0.006), and on Medication information a
significant mean decrease of 0.28, (P0.013).
16Discussion
- More congruence among nurse groups than
previously reported - Priority of symptoms as per Roebuck et al
(2001) QL - Medications usually ranked high among nurse
groups risk factors among patients - Changes in needs over time noted
17Discussion
- Physical activity low priority as per Turton
(1998) - Sexual activity information - low priority unless
indicated by patient or spouse?(Turton,1998) - Sexuality as a topic?
18What the signs symptoms of a heart attack are
What to do for chest pain
- When to call a GP or ambulance
Reducing the chance of having another heart attack
19Most helpful information- addressed their
concerns about having another MI
Lack of direction-bewilderment
- Credibility of information
Perceptions of the cause of MI
20Recommendations
- Patient information needs assessment using simple
methods - Teaching tailored to individual needs
- Practical information central to survival crucial
core of teaching - Language, terminology and approach congruent with
patients needs