The effects of a transitional care program on discharge readiness, transitional care quality, health services utilization and satisfaction among Chinese kidney transplant recipients: A randomized controlled trial

Kidney transplantation is the major treatment for end-stage renal disease (ESRD). However, kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) face severe challenges during the transition period from hospital discharge to home, increasing the risk of early hospital readmission (EHR) and affecting patient safety. Ne...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of nursing studies 2020-10, Vol.110, p.103700-103700, Article 103700
Hauptverfasser: Hu, Rujun, Gu, Bo, Tan, Qiling, Xiao, KaiZhi, Li, Xiaoqin, Cao, Xiaoyi, Song, Turun, Jiang, Xiaolian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Kidney transplantation is the major treatment for end-stage renal disease (ESRD). However, kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) face severe challenges during the transition period from hospital discharge to home, increasing the risk of early hospital readmission (EHR) and affecting patient safety. Nevertheless, knowledge of effective transitional care for KTRs is limited in China. To evaluate the effectiveness of an innovative transitional care program in improving discharge readiness, transitional care quality, health services utilization and patient satisfaction among KTRs in China. A prospective randomized controlled trial. Patients admitted to undergo kidney transplantation were recruited in a general tertiary hospital in Chengdu, China. A total of 220 eligible patients were recruited and randomly assigned to the intervention and control groups. Participants in the intervention group received a transitional care intervention developed by the research team, including a risk assessment for early readmission, health education from admission to predischarge, individualized discharge planning, and a telephone follow-up once per week for one month and WeChat follow-up postdischarge. The control group received routine care of comparable length and follow-up contact. A trained research assistant collected all patients' baseline data on admission (T0), evaluated the discharge readiness (by the Readiness for Hospital Discharge Scale) on the day of discharge (T1), collected data on transitional care quality (by the Care Transition Measure-15) and patients' satisfaction with transitional care services (by a self-developed patient satisfaction scale) on the 30th day postdischarge (T2), and collected data on hospital readmission, unscheduled outpatient department visits, and emergency room visits on the 30th and 90th days (by a self-developed health services utilization record table) (T3) postdischarge. Intervention effects were analyzed using independent samples t-tests, Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney U tests, Chi-square tests or Fisher's exact test. Compared with the control group, the intervention group showed significantly better discharge readiness (personal status, P
ISSN:0020-7489
1873-491X
DOI:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2020.103700