Ineffective hospital discharge communication can significantly impact patient understanding, safety, and treatment adherence. This is especially true for cardiology patients, who leave the hospital with complex discharge plans, a multitude of high-risk medications, post-procedural care instructions and recommendations for drastic lifestyle changes, all delivered in a time-pressured discharge discussion. The goal of this pilot trial is to determine if it is possible to use audio recordings to supplement usual discharge communication to improve cardiology patients' ability to understand and self-manage care after leaving the hospital.
The study objective is to assess the feasibility and acceptability of providing audio recorded discharge instructions to patients discharged from an inpatient cardiology service using a two-arm randomized controlled design. Specifically, this pilot study aims to: 1) Determine whether providing audio recorded discharge instructions as a supplemental discharge communication tool is feasible for cardiology providers and patients to use during the inpatient discharge discussion, 2) Determine whether it is acceptable for patients and families to use audio recorded discharge instructions after hospital discharge to self-manage care, and 3) Explore the impact of audio recording on patients' understanding of discharge instructions, ability to self-manage care and ability to adhere to prescribed medications. On the day of discharge, enrolled patients will be randomized to a usual care arm, which includes bedside discussion and review of written discharge instructions with the discharging provider, or to an intervention arm, which includes bedside discussion and review of written discharge instructions with the discharging provider and an audio recording of that bedside discharge discussion using block randomization at the provider level. All participants randomized to the intervention arm will receive a portable, electronic recording device with audio playback that contains a recording of the bedside discharge discussion, and will also have the option to record the discharge discussion on a smartphone or receive access to the recording online, via the Open Recording Automated Logging System (ORALS). The hypothesis is providing audio recordings of discharge instructions will be feasible and acceptable to cardiology patients and providers. One week after discharge, all enrolled patients (both arms) will be contacted via telephone to complete an interview about the use of written discharge instructions and a survey about understanding of discharge instructions, confidence and ability to self-manage care, and medication adherence. In addition, patients in the intervention arm will be interviewed about how the audio recording of the discharge discussion was used.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
57
All participants will be provided with a re-playable audio recording of the discharge discussion on a portable electronic device. In addition, participants will have the option to record the discharge discussion on a personally-owned smartphone or receive access to the recording online, via the Open Recording Automated Logging System (ORALS).
Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center
Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States
Patient enrollment (Feasibility)
The proportion of eligible cardiology inpatients who agreed to take part in the research.
Time frame: Time 1-Day of discharge, immediately post randomization
Intervention fidelity (Feasibility)
The proportion of cardiology inpatients in the intervention arm that received the audio recording intervention with full adherence to a pre-defined protocol fidelity checklist. Any deviations will be documented.
Time frame: Time 1-Day of discharge, immediately post randomization
Patient use of intervention (Acceptability)
The proportion of discharged cardiology patients in the intervention arm who used the audio recording between the day of discharge and a one-week follow up telephone call initiated by the research team.
Time frame: Time 2-One week after discharge, post randomization
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