Abstract

BackgroundInpatient awareness of the reason for their admission and the planned management enhances patient compliance and empowers patients to be resourceful in subsequent consultations. The objective of this study was to determine patients’ awareness of their clinical conditions while admitted to an academic hospital.MethodsA survey was conducted at Dr George Mukhari Academic Hospital in Pretoria, from 6 to 17 December 2010, on 264 inpatients drawn from a population of 837 through a systematic sampling method. Data on inpatient awareness were collected using a researcher-administered questionnaire, which was available in English, as well as isiZulu and Setswana. Components of patients’ global awareness were clinical diagnosis, necessity for admission, planned management, possible condition cause(s), duration of admission, and planned investigations, operations and procedures. We conducted regression analysis on possible predictors of global awareness: age, marital status, occupation and educational level. The SAS (Release 9.2) was used for data analysis.ResultsOne hundred and thirty-six inpatients (51.5%) had global awareness of their clinical conditions and management plans. High degrees of awareness were reported on clinical diagnosis 206 (78.0%), reason for admission 203 (76.9%), planned management 206 (78.0%), and current medication 222 (84.1%). Fifty (18.9%) respondents were aware of their estimated admission duration. Patients who were informed of admission duration were likely to be informed of their planned management (p < 0.01). When health care practitioners did not volunteer information, most respondents (>69%) did not seek information. When information was provided, the majority of respondents (>70%) reported understanding the information. The proportion of patients who acknowledged the shared responsibility by the health care practitioner and the patient to raise awareness among the inpatients was significantly more than those who did not (p = 0.03). Patients’ age, marital status, occupation and educational level were not predictors of global awareness (p > 0.05).ConclusionsThe proportions of respondents who were aware of the different aspects of health care ranged from 18.9% to 84.1%. About half of respondents had global awareness of their admission reasons and management plans. Raising awareness of patients’ clinical conditions should be part of the health care practitioner-patient encounter.

Highlights

  • Inpatient awareness of the reason for their admission and the planned management enhances patient compliance and empowers patients to be resourceful in subsequent consultations

  • NA: Not appicable / NR: Not responded to Discussion This study investigated the awareness of inpatients about the reasons for their admission and the management plans of their clinical conditions

  • This study found that only one in two patients reported global awareness of the different aspects of health care provided to them (Table 2), leaving almost half of all patients being managed at Dr George Mukhari Academic Hospital (DGMAH) oblivious to different aspects of the health care they were receiving

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Summary

Introduction

Inpatient awareness of the reason for their admission and the planned management enhances patient compliance and empowers patients to be resourceful in subsequent consultations. The objective of this study was to determine patients’ awareness of their clinical conditions while admitted to an academic hospital. Patients’ rights to access information have been outlined in each charter, the process towards the realisation of this ideal is left in the care of each institution. Any patient whose clinical condition warrants admission to a health care institution needs to be made aware of the clinician’s working diagnosis, the reason for the decision to admit, and the inherent risks for nonadmission. The inpatient needs to be constantly updated on the management plan, including the estimated length of hospital stay, investigative procedures, medication and operative procedures envisaged

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