Palliative care is of great importance because of poor quality of life and high mortality risk in advanced heart failure. This study was planned as a randomized controlled trial to determine the effect of palliative care training on symptom management, rehospitalization, and quality of life among patients with heart failure.
Patients were informed about the research and written informed consent was obtained. Data were collected by face-to-face interviews within two days before discharge. Patient information form and scales were applied to Patients in the intervention and control groups. Patients in the intervention group were received education after filling the forms. The training was given one by one at the hospital. One or two relatives of patients were included in the training. The patient was comfortably seated, and the room door was closed, face to face interaction was conducted. The patient and his/her relatives were allowed to ask questions during the training. The patient in the intervention group received at least 45 minutes of data collection from a case because of detailed training. It took about 15 minutes to collect data from a patient in the control group. In some patients, the training program was divided to be clearer. The patients were traced by telephone at the first, third, and sixth months after discharge. The investigator's phone number was presented to the patients and they were told that they could call at any time. Continuous communication was ensured by giving the educator's phone number to the patients. The training was repeated by contacting the phone. The intervention group was retrained about symptoms they experienced during their telephone interview. The training was given to the experimental group as planned. No modifications/changes were made to the intervention during the study. Special notes were taken for each patient. The effect of the education given on the quality of life and symptom management was evaluated with questionnaires. The intervention was adhered to as planned.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
84
The patients in the intervention group were presented palliative care training in addition to their usual care
Marmara U.
Istanbul, Turkey (Türkiye)
Marmara University
Istanbul, Turkey (Türkiye)
Edmonton symptom assessment scale
ESAS consists of 10 symptoms as tiredness, pain, feeling of well-being, nausea, depression, anxiety, lack of appetite, drowsiness, shortness of breath, and others. Each symptom is scored between 0 and 10. While Zero points indicate no symptoms, 10 points are severe of symptoms.
Time frame: six months
LVD-36-left ventricular dysfunction questionnaire
The questionnaire consists of 36 questions and the questions are answered as true or false. The correct answers are collected and indicated as the total percentage. The score is 0-100. High scores indicate poor quality of life.
Time frame: six months
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