Abstract

To assess the level of satisfaction of patients who access the Ophthalmic counselling services anchored by trained social workers of the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital, Calabar, Nigeria. A cross-sectional study of serial consenting participants was done. Ethical approval was obtained from the University of Calabar Teaching hospitals' ethics committee. Data was obtained using a semi-structured interviewer-administered questionnaire. Data were collated and analyzed using the SPSS for Windows (version 20, SPSS inc. Chicago, IL, USA). Modified Likert scale (very satisfied, satisfied and not satisfied) was used to rate the satisfaction level. A total of 120 respondents met the inclusion criteria and were enrolled into the study. Majority of the respondents (60%) were male with an overall mean age of 45.32± 1.82. Over a quarter (28.3%) of the respondents were in the age bracket of 41-50. Glaucoma (48.3%) was the most common eye condition of the respondents. Seventy-five percent of the respondents were satisfied with the average time spent for the counselling services while 76.7% were satisfied with the overall ophthalmic counselling services they received with 46.7% believing that the service was provided by a social worker. Majority of the Patients were satisfied with the Ophthalmic counselling services mainly anchored by social workers. Training and retraining of allied support staff to render ophthalmic counselling services in order to ease the workload of the Ophthalmologist should be encouraged in resource-limited settings. None declared.

Highlights

  • Patients counselling is gradually taking a front line in holistic health care management in most health care facilities throughout the world

  • Despite the time consuming effect associated with counselling, it is believed that with good counselling, fears about disease conditions are reduced with an accompanying level of satisfaction and comfort on leaving the care giver.[2]

  • This study is aimed at assessing the satisfaction levels of patients who access the Ophthalmic counselling services of University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH)

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Summary

Introduction

Patients counselling is gradually taking a front line in holistic health care management in most health care facilities throughout the world. Despite the time consuming effect associated with counselling, it is believed that with good counselling, fears about disease conditions are reduced with an accompanying level of satisfaction and comfort on leaving the care giver.[2] In the past, counselling in hospital settings was mainly done by doctors and nurses who cared for the patients. Due to increasing workload of doctors and nurses, counselling services are being provided by trained non-clinical staff in some health facilities because patients counselling is a lengthy cooperative mode of work demanding active participation from both practitioner and client.[3]

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