Tkachuk Bryce, Robrigado Matthew, Blayney Sarah, Caldwell Katie, Johnson Emily, Hyde Ashley, Vandermeer Ben, Tandon Puneeta
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Can Liver J. 2024 Dec 19;7(4):458-469. doi: 10.3138/canlivj-2024-0037. eCollection 2024 Dec.
The Cirrhosis Care Alberta (CCAB) Project has created an expert-guided educational video for patients with decompensated cirrhosis. The effect of this video on improving disease-related knowledge in patients with decompensated cirrhosis has yet to be determined.
In-patients with decompensated cirrhosis were prospectively recruited between November 2022 and August 2023. A pre-post-intervention design employing a questionnaire on managing complications of decompensated cirrhosis was used to evaluate whether the CCAB educational video was effective in improving disease-related knowledge, the primary outcome. Baseline knowledge was defined as preintervention questionnaire scores. Learning was defined as the difference between postintervention and preintervention questionnaire scores. Follow-up occurred 30 days when the same questionnaire was readministered. Univariate and multivariate regression analyses evaluated if any participant demographics and disease-related characteristics predicted baseline knowledge or learning.
Fifty participants were included. Study participants were predominantly biologically male (62%), aged 40-75 (78%), and had an average of 2.4 (SD: 2.8) prior cirrhosis-related hospitalizations. The mean baseline knowledge score among participants was 62% (SD: 17.3). The mean questionnaire scores following the educational video rose to 72.5% (SD: 20.2%, < 0.001). Sixteen (32%) participants completed the 30-day follow-up questionnaire with a mean score of 78.8% (SD: 14.7, = 0.02). Univariate analysis demonstrated that age, number of prior cirrhosis-related hospitalizations, and number of decompensating events predicted baseline knowledge scores ( values < 0.05).
The CCAB educational video is effective in improving disease-related knowledge scores. Further investigation evaluating this effect on clinical outcomes is needed.
艾伯塔省肝硬化护理(CCAB)项目为失代偿期肝硬化患者制作了一部由专家指导的教育视频。该视频对提高失代偿期肝硬化患者疾病相关知识的效果尚未确定。
在2022年11月至2023年8月期间前瞻性招募失代偿期肝硬化住院患者。采用前后干预设计,使用一份关于失代偿期肝硬化并发症管理的问卷来评估CCAB教育视频是否能有效提高疾病相关知识这一主要结局。基线知识定义为干预前问卷得分。学习定义为干预后与干预前问卷得分的差值。在30天时再次发放相同问卷进行随访。单因素和多因素回归分析评估是否有任何参与者的人口统计学和疾病相关特征可预测基线知识或学习情况。
纳入了50名参与者。研究参与者主要为男性(62%),年龄在40 - 75岁之间(78%),既往平均有2.4次(标准差:2.8)与肝硬化相关的住院治疗。参与者的平均基线知识得分是62%(标准差:17.3)。观看教育视频后问卷平均得分升至72.5%(标准差:20.2%,P < 0.001)。16名(32%)参与者完成了30天随访问卷,平均得分78.8%(标准差:14.7,P = 0.02)。单因素分析表明,年龄、既往与肝硬化相关的住院次数和失代偿事件数量可预测基线知识得分(P值< 0.05)。
CCAB教育视频能有效提高疾病相关知识得分。需要进一步研究评估其对临床结局的影响。