ObjectivesTo identify the learning needs of patients with heart
failure between outpatients follow-up visits from their perspective and to
ascertain what they emphasize as being important in the design of an
educational website for them.
MethodsWe conducted a two-step qualitative study at Aarhus
University Hospital, Denmark. Twenty patients with heart failure participated either
in focus group interviews, diary writing, or video-recorded design sessions.
Data on learning needs were collected in step 1 and analyses, therefore, helped
develop the preliminary prototypes of a website. In step 2, patients worked on
the prototypes in video-recorded design sessions, employing a think-aloud
method. The interviews were transcribed and a content analysis was performed on
the text and video data.
ResultsPatients’ learning needs were multifaceted, driven by
anxiety, arising from, and often influenced by, such daily situations and
contexts as the medical condition, medication, challenges in daily life, and
where to get support and how to manage their self-care. They emphasized
different ways of adapting the design to the patient group to enable
interaction with peers and professionals and specific interface issues.
ConclusionsThis study provided insights into the different learning
needs of patients with heart failure, how managing daily situations is the
starting point for these needs and how emotions play a part in patients’
learning. Moreover, it showed how patient co-designers proved to be useful for
understanding how to design a website that supports patients’ learning:
insights, which may become important in designing online learning tools for
patients.
Objectives: to explore how cross-sectional healthcare and treatment is experienced a) by patients with advanced heart failure and multimorbidity and b) by hospital-employed healthcare professionals. Methods: Individual telephone interviews with 18 patients and close relatives were conducted. Furthermore, a focus group session was conducted with four specialised hospitalemployed healthcare professionals. Purposeful sampling was used and interviews were semi-structured. Data were analysed using qualitative inductive content analysis. Results: Three main themes emerged from the interviews with patients and close relatives. These included: 1) A need for improved coordination to ensure continuity of care; 2) a plea for patient-centred care; and 3) recognition of the need to care for close relatives. Analysis of the interviews with hospital-employed healthcare professionals also produced three themes. These concerned: 1) recognition of the role and needs of close relatives; 2) limited resources for and difficulties in meeting these needs; and 3) agreement on the need for patient-centred care. Furthermore, we learned that perceived challenges are rooted in time constraints and the need for an adequate level of medical knowledge of chronic conditions and complex treatment strategies. Conclusions: This study indicates that cross-sectional healthcare and treatment of patients with advanced heart failure and multimorbidity lacked coordination, was insufficiently patient-centred and did not cater for close relatives' needs. The study identifies patient-centredness and coordination of healthcare services targeting patients and close relatives alike as critical to proper care, medical curriculum development and continued medical training courses.
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