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An Educational Intervention to Train Professional Nurses in Promoting Patient Engagement: A Pilot Feasibility Study

Introduction: Growing evidence recognizes that patients who are motivated to take an active role in their care can experience a range of health benefits and reduced healthcare costs. Nurses play a critical role in the effort to make patients fully engaged in their disease management. Trainings devot...

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Autores principales: Barello, Serena, Graffigna, Guendalina, Pitacco, Giuliana, Mislej, Maila, Cortale, Maurizio, Provenzi, Livio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5222845/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28119644
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.02020
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author Barello, Serena
Graffigna, Guendalina
Pitacco, Giuliana
Mislej, Maila
Cortale, Maurizio
Provenzi, Livio
author_facet Barello, Serena
Graffigna, Guendalina
Pitacco, Giuliana
Mislej, Maila
Cortale, Maurizio
Provenzi, Livio
author_sort Barello, Serena
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Growing evidence recognizes that patients who are motivated to take an active role in their care can experience a range of health benefits and reduced healthcare costs. Nurses play a critical role in the effort to make patients fully engaged in their disease management. Trainings devoted to increase nurses' skills and knowledge to assess and promote patient engagement are today a medical education priority. To address this goal, we developed a program of nurse education training in patient engagement strategies (NET-PES). This paper presents pilot feasibility study and preliminary participants outcomes for NET-PES. Methods: This is a pilot feasibility study of a 2-session program on patient engagement designed to improve professional nurses' ability to engage chronic patients in their medical journey; the training mainly focused on passing patient engagement assessment skills to clinicians as a crucial mean to improve care experience. A pre-post pilot evaluation of NET-PES included 46 nurses working with chronic conditions. A course specific competence test has been developed and validated to measure patient engagement skills. The design included self-report questionnaire completed before and after the training for evaluation purposes. Participants met in a large group for didactic presentations and then they were split into small groups in which they used role-play and case discussion to reflect upon the value of patient engagement measurement in relation to difficult cases from own practice. Results: Forty-six nurses participated in the training program. The satisfaction questionnaire showed that the program met the educational objectives and was considered to be useful and relevant by the participants. Results demonstrated changes on clinicians' attitudes and skills in promoting engagement. Moreover, practitioners demonstrated increases on confidence regarding their ability to support their patients' engagement in the care process. Conclusions: Learning programs teaching nurses about patient engagement strategies and assessment measures in clinical practice are key in supporting the realization of patient engagement in healthcare. Training nurses in this area is feasible and accepted and might have an impact on their ability to engage patients in the chronic care journey. Due to the limitation of the research design, further research is needed to assess the effectiveness of such a program and to verify if the benefits envisaged in this pilot are maintained on a long-term perspective and to test results by employing a randomized control study design.
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spelling pubmed-52228452017-01-24 An Educational Intervention to Train Professional Nurses in Promoting Patient Engagement: A Pilot Feasibility Study Barello, Serena Graffigna, Guendalina Pitacco, Giuliana Mislej, Maila Cortale, Maurizio Provenzi, Livio Front Psychol Psychology Introduction: Growing evidence recognizes that patients who are motivated to take an active role in their care can experience a range of health benefits and reduced healthcare costs. Nurses play a critical role in the effort to make patients fully engaged in their disease management. Trainings devoted to increase nurses' skills and knowledge to assess and promote patient engagement are today a medical education priority. To address this goal, we developed a program of nurse education training in patient engagement strategies (NET-PES). This paper presents pilot feasibility study and preliminary participants outcomes for NET-PES. Methods: This is a pilot feasibility study of a 2-session program on patient engagement designed to improve professional nurses' ability to engage chronic patients in their medical journey; the training mainly focused on passing patient engagement assessment skills to clinicians as a crucial mean to improve care experience. A pre-post pilot evaluation of NET-PES included 46 nurses working with chronic conditions. A course specific competence test has been developed and validated to measure patient engagement skills. The design included self-report questionnaire completed before and after the training for evaluation purposes. Participants met in a large group for didactic presentations and then they were split into small groups in which they used role-play and case discussion to reflect upon the value of patient engagement measurement in relation to difficult cases from own practice. Results: Forty-six nurses participated in the training program. The satisfaction questionnaire showed that the program met the educational objectives and was considered to be useful and relevant by the participants. Results demonstrated changes on clinicians' attitudes and skills in promoting engagement. Moreover, practitioners demonstrated increases on confidence regarding their ability to support their patients' engagement in the care process. Conclusions: Learning programs teaching nurses about patient engagement strategies and assessment measures in clinical practice are key in supporting the realization of patient engagement in healthcare. Training nurses in this area is feasible and accepted and might have an impact on their ability to engage patients in the chronic care journey. Due to the limitation of the research design, further research is needed to assess the effectiveness of such a program and to verify if the benefits envisaged in this pilot are maintained on a long-term perspective and to test results by employing a randomized control study design. Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC5222845/ /pubmed/28119644 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.02020 Text en Copyright © 2017 Barello, Graffigna, Pitacco, Mislej, Cortale and Provenzi. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychology
Barello, Serena
Graffigna, Guendalina
Pitacco, Giuliana
Mislej, Maila
Cortale, Maurizio
Provenzi, Livio
An Educational Intervention to Train Professional Nurses in Promoting Patient Engagement: A Pilot Feasibility Study
title An Educational Intervention to Train Professional Nurses in Promoting Patient Engagement: A Pilot Feasibility Study
title_full An Educational Intervention to Train Professional Nurses in Promoting Patient Engagement: A Pilot Feasibility Study
title_fullStr An Educational Intervention to Train Professional Nurses in Promoting Patient Engagement: A Pilot Feasibility Study
title_full_unstemmed An Educational Intervention to Train Professional Nurses in Promoting Patient Engagement: A Pilot Feasibility Study
title_short An Educational Intervention to Train Professional Nurses in Promoting Patient Engagement: A Pilot Feasibility Study
title_sort educational intervention to train professional nurses in promoting patient engagement: a pilot feasibility study
topic Psychology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5222845/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28119644
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.02020
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