Internal medicine journal
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Internal medicine journal · Sep 2014
Randomized Controlled TrialEffect of a patient-directed discharge letter on patient understanding of their hospitalisation.
Poor patient understanding of their diagnosis and treatment plan can adversely impact clinical outcome following hospital discharge. Discharge summaries are primarily written for the doctor rather than the patient. We determined patient understanding of the reasons for hospitalisation, in-hospital tests, treatments and post-discharge recommendations, and whether a brief patient-directed discharge letter (PADDLE) delivered during a brief discussion prior to discharge would improve understanding. ⋯ A simple patient-directed letter delivered during a brief discussion improves patient understanding of their hospitalisation and post-discharge recommendations, which is otherwise limited. Further evaluation of this brief and well-received intervention is indicated, with the goal of improving patient understanding, satisfaction and clinical outcomes.
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Internal medicine journal · Sep 2014
Randomized Controlled TrialEffect of hospital-based telephone coaching on glycaemic control and adherence to management guidelines in type 2 diabetes, a randomised controlled trial.
Failure to achieve treatment targets is common among people with type 2 diabetes. Cost-effective treatments are required to delay the onset and slow the progression of diabetes-related complications. ⋯ Telephone coaching improved glycaemic control and adherence to complication screening in people with type 2 diabetes, for the duration of its delivery, but these effects were not maintained on withdrawal of the intervention. Strategies that assist patients to sustain these benefits are required.