Nurses' attitudes and behaviors on patient medication education
Medication education is vital for positive patient outcomes. However, there is limited information about optimal medication education by nurses during hospitalization and care transitions. Examine nurses' attitudes and behaviors regarding the provision of patient medication education. The secon...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Pharmacy practice 2017-04, Vol.15 (2), p.930-930 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Medication education is vital for positive patient outcomes. However, there is limited information about optimal medication education by nurses during hospitalization and care transitions.
Examine nurses' attitudes and behaviors regarding the provision of patient medication education. The secondary objectives were to determine if nurses' medication education attitudes explain their behaviors, describe nurses' confidence in patient medication knowledge and abilities, and identify challenges to and improvements for medication education.
A cross sectional survey was administered to nurses servicing internal medicine, cardiology, or medical-surgical patients.
Twenty-four nurses completed the survey. Greater than 90% of nurses believed it is important to provide information on new medications and medical conditions, utilize resources, assess patient understanding and adherence, and use open ended question. Only 58% believed it is important to provide information on refill medications. Greater than 80% of nurses consistently provided information on new medications, assessed patient understanding, and utilized resources, but one-third or less used open-ended questions or provided information on refill medications. Most nurses spend 5-9 minutes per patient on medication education and their attitudes matched the following medication education behaviors: assessing adherence (0.57; p |
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ISSN: | 1885-642X 1886-3655 1886-3655 1696-1137 |
DOI: | 10.18549/PharmPract.2017.02.930 |