Sit Janet W H, Yip Vera Y B, Ko Stanley K K, Gun Amy P C, Lee Judy S H
School of Nursing, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China.
J Clin Nurs. 2007 Feb;16(2):272-81. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2005.01522.x.
The aim of this study was to determine the effectiveness of a community-based stroke prevention programme in (1) improving knowledge about stroke; (2) improving self-health-monitoring practice; (3) maintaining behavioural changes when adopting a healthy lifestyle for stroke prevention.
People with minor stroke (or transient ischaemic attack) tend to under-estimate the long-term impact of this on their health. The challenge for nurses is to prevent subsequent strokes by finding ways to promote and sustain appropriate behaviours. Educational intervention is of paramount importance in equipping those at risk with relevant knowledge and self-care strategies for secondary stroke prevention.
This study adopted a quasi-experimental design.
One hundred and ninety subjects were recruited, of whom 147 (77 in the intervention group and 70 in the control group) completed the study. Data were obtained at three time points: baseline (T0); one week after (T1) and three months after (T2) the intervention. The intervention programme consisted of eight weekly two-hour sessions, with the aims of improving the participants' awareness of their own health signals and of actively involving them in self-care management of their own health for secondary stroke prevention.
Significant positive changes were found among participants of the intervention group in the knowledge on stroke warning signs (P < 0.001); treatment seeking response in case of a stroke (P < 0.001); medication compliance (P < 0.001); self blood pressure monitoring (P < 0.001) as well as lifestyle modification of dietary habits (reduction in salted food intake, P = 0.004). No significant improvement was found in walking exercise participation in the intervention group, yet a significant decrease was detected among the control group.
This study found a three-month-sustained effect of positive changes in knowledge and skill from participants who undertook a nurse-led community-based stroke prevention programme.
Effective educational intervention by professional nurses helped clients integrate their learned knowledge into their real-life practice. This empowering, that is, the taking of responsibility by clients for their own self-care management on a daily basis, affirms that patient education has moved beyond teaching people facts.
本研究旨在确定一项基于社区的中风预防计划在以下方面的有效性:(1)提高中风相关知识;(2)改善自我健康监测行为;(3)在采用健康生活方式预防中风时维持行为改变。
轻度中风(或短暂性脑缺血发作)患者往往低估其对自身健康的长期影响。护士面临的挑战是通过寻找促进和维持适当行为的方法来预防后续中风。教育干预对于使高危人群具备二级中风预防的相关知识和自我护理策略至关重要。
本研究采用准实验设计。
招募了190名受试者,其中147名(干预组77名,对照组70名)完成了研究。在三个时间点获取数据:基线(T0);干预后一周(T1)和干预后三个月(T2)。干预计划包括为期八周、每周两小时的课程,目的是提高参与者对自身健康信号的认识,并积极让他们参与自身健康的自我护理管理以进行二级中风预防。
干预组参与者在中风警示信号知识(P < 0.001);中风时寻求治疗的反应(P < 0.001);药物依从性(P < 0.001);自我血压监测(P < 0.001)以及饮食习惯的生活方式改变(减少咸食摄入量,P = 0.004)方面有显著的积极变化。干预组的步行锻炼参与度没有显著提高,但对照组有显著下降。
本研究发现,参与由护士主导的基于社区的中风预防计划的参与者,其知识和技能的积极变化持续了三个月。
专业护士进行的有效教育干预帮助患者将所学知识融入实际生活实践。这种赋能,即让患者每天对自己的自我护理管理负责,证实了患者教育已超越向人们传授事实。