Department of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2024 May 30;14(5):e085140. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-085140.
Patients in Nova Scotia do not have access to public prenatal education programming. This study aimed to explore whether care providers find patients are uninformed or misinformed, and the impact of that on patients and their care providers with a focus on clinical outcomes, time, resources and informed decision-making.
Semistructured interviews were conducted with 13 care providers around Halifax and Cape Breton. An interview guide (supplemental) of open-ended questions was used for consistency. A descriptive qualitative approach was employed to describe the contents of the interviews. Each interview was audio-taped and transcribed verbatim by an interdependent transcriber. Transcripts were analysed using established techniques in qualitative descriptive research including coding, grouping, detailing and comparing the data using NVivo V.12 software. A co-coder (SS) independently coded two interviews for inter-rater reliability.
The study revealed six themes: (1) concern for a significant population of Nova Scotians experiencing pregnancy, birth and postpartum uninformed and misinformed, (2) consequences for patients who are uninformed and misinformed, (3) more time and resources spent on care for patients who are uninformed or misinformed, (4) patients and their care providers need a publicly available education programme, particularly vulnerable populations, (5) emphasis on programme quality and disappointment with the programme previously been in place and (6) recommendations for an effective prenatal education programme for Nova Scotians.
This study shows care providers believe a public prenatal education programme could improve health literacy in Nova Scotia. Patients are seeking health education, but it is not accessible to all and being uninformed or misinformed negatively impacts patients' experiences and outcomes. This study revealed excess time and resources are being spent on individualised prenatal education by care providers with high individual and system-wide cost and explored the complicated process of providing patient-centred care for people who are uninformed or misinformed.
新斯科舍省的患者无法获得公共产前教育计划。本研究旨在探讨护理提供者是否认为患者缺乏信息或信息有误,以及这对患者及其护理提供者的影响,重点关注临床结果、时间、资源和知情决策。
在哈利法克斯和布雷顿角周围对 13 名护理提供者进行了半结构式访谈。使用开放式问题的访谈指南(补充)保持一致性。采用描述性定性方法描述访谈内容。每次访谈都由一位相互依存的转录员进行录音和逐字转录。使用 NVivo V.12 软件,通过编码、分组、详细说明和比较数据,对转录本进行了分析。一位共同编码员(SS)独立对两个访谈进行了编码,以进行评分者间可靠性分析。
研究揭示了六个主题:(1)关注新斯科舍省大量经历怀孕、分娩和产后缺乏信息和信息错误的人群;(2)对缺乏信息和信息错误的患者的后果;(3)为缺乏信息或信息错误的患者提供护理所花费的更多时间和资源;(4)患者及其护理提供者需要一个公开的教育计划,特别是弱势群体;(5)强调计划质量,并对之前实施的计划感到失望;(6)为新斯科舍省的产前教育计划提出建议。
本研究表明,护理提供者认为公共产前教育计划可以提高新斯科舍省的健康素养。患者正在寻求健康教育,但并非所有人都能获得,缺乏信息或信息错误会对患者的体验和结果产生负面影响。本研究揭示了护理提供者在为缺乏信息或信息错误的患者提供个性化产前教育方面投入了过多的时间和资源,并且探讨了为缺乏信息或信息错误的患者提供以患者为中心的护理的复杂过程。