Development and evaluation of interdisciplinary preoperative patient education in foot and ankle surgery: immediate effects on knowledge, satisfaction and anxiety / Entwicklung und erste Evaluation eines präoperativen interdisziplinären Schulungskonzeptes für Patienten/-innen der Fußchirurgie: unmittelbare Effekte auf Wissenszuwachs, Zufriedenheit und Angst
Published Online: Jun 30, 2017
Page range: 25 - 32
Received: Jul 10, 2015
Accepted: Sep 21, 2016
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/ijhp-2017-0005
Keywords
© 2017 Axel Schäfer, Katrin Jettkowski, Julia Kretschmann, Marco Wurg, Christina Stukenborg-Colsmann, Christian Plaaß, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.
Background and objective
Foot and ankle surgery is increasing due to demographic and lifestyle changes. Most often, patients are required to unload their foot postoperatively, resulting in signifcant impairment of activities of daily living without adequate preparation for this situation. The aim of the study was the development and evaluation of a preoperative patient education intervention.
Methods
Based on current research, a patient education intervention was developed. To investigate immediate effects, a longitudinal study with two points of measurement before and after the education session was conducted. Outcomes were increase in knowledge, satisfaction and preoperative anxiety, which were measured with a selfdeveloped questionnaire. Additionally, five short interviews were conducted.
Results
56 patients (63% female) with a mean age of 56,7 (SD=14,8) years were included. Patients had a signifcant increase in knowledge following the intervention from mean 3,93 (SD=1,78) to 5,48 (SD=2,29) correctly answered questions (out of 10). Patients felt that they were better informed and more satisfied with the information provided. Patients evaluated the way of information delivery, the content of information, the group and the location as positive.The expectations of patients relating to postoperative load-bearing capacity and coping with everyday life as well as preoperative anxiety did not change following the intervention.
Conclusion
The education intervention could be implemented in the clinical routine and showed positive effects. However, regarding realistic expectations and preoperative anxiety no change was observed. Long-term post operative effectivity and effciency of patient education should be further examined within a randomized controlled trial.