Patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) need considerable education to enable them to provide effective self-care for their chronic illness. No information has been published about the learning needs of this population. The purpose of this study was to examine hospitalized CHF patients and their nurses' perceptions regarding the importance and realism of typical patient education content. An instrument to assess learning needs was developed and piloted for use in this study. Thirty hospitalized patients and 26 nurses were surveyed. Both nurses and patients rated all information as important to learn and realistic to learn during the patients' hospitalizations. Patients and nurses agreed that medication information was the most important to learn. Generally, patients rated information as more important than nurses rated the same information areas. Suggested nursing interventions and future research endeavours are addressed.
Cardiac surgery patients are at risk for unplanned readmissions due to the various complications they may experience following surgery. The purpose of this report is to critically review the literature related to predictors of unplanned readmissions of cardiac surgery patients following discharge from the hospital. A literature review was conducted from 1989 to 1999 using MEDLINE and CINAHL, with the following key words: cardiac surgery, coronary artery bypass surgery, recovery, and readmission. The literature revealed that gender and race do have an effect on how well a patient will recover following cardiac surgery. It was also found that patients with longer lengths of stay due to complications were at greater risk for readmission following discharge from the hospital. There was no evidence that decreased length of stay for this patient group led to a greater number of readmissions. Implications for nurses include the need for improved coordination of patient care and implementation of effective discharge planning in high-risk patients. Additional research is needed to develop interventions to decrease readmissions of women and African Americans and other racial groups specific to their particular risk factors for readmission following cardiac surgery.
The purpose of this study was to discover whether implementation of a patient-family pathway with patients and families undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery impacted anxiety, information with care planning, and patient length of stay. Using an experimental design, a sample of 60 patients and family members was studied. Each patient and his or her designated family member received either the patient-family pathway or the hospital's standard care planning. Findings indicated no statistically significant differences in state anxiety or information with care planning between patients and family members receiving the patient-family pathway and those receiving standard care planning. There was no statistically significant difference in length of stay between the two patient groups. The results indicate that the CABG patient-family pathway has limited value to patients and families as measured in this study. Resources can be real-located to other uses that may have a more positive impact on the patient and family experience.
Sudden cardiac death is the leading cause of death in the United States. A relatively new technology used to treat ventricular dysrhythmias that lead to sudden cardiac death is the automatic implantable cardioverter defibrillator. This device uses patches on the heart to deliver an energy current to convert lethal dysrhythmias. The nurse practitioner can expect to encounter these devices when seeing patients for a variety of diagnoses. This article will serve as a resource for clinical management and patient education.
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