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1.
G Ital Cardiol (Rome) ; 22(3): 221-232, 2021 Mar.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33687375

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Home care for patients with chronic diseases and specifically with heart failure (HF) is one of the main challenges of health care for the future. Telemedicine, applied to HF, allows intensive home monitoring of the most advanced patients, improving their prognosis and quality of life. The European SmartCare project was carried out in the Friuli Venezia Giulia (FVG) region with the aim of improving integrated health and social care in patients with chronic non-communicable diseases (CNCD) through home telemonitoring (TM) and promoting self-management and patient empowerment. METHODS: The SmartCare project in FVG was a prospective, randomized and controlled cohort study that enrolled, from November 2014 to February 2016, 201 patients in integrated home care ("usual care" [UC] in our study) to TM (n=100) or UC (n=101). Inclusion criteria were age >50 years, at least 1 CNCD (HF, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or diabetes) and 1 missing BADL. There were 19 drop-outs (9%) (12 in the TM arm; 7 in the UC arm; p=NS). All patients were followed by a multiprofessional team and stratified in the short-term pathway (3-6 months; average 4 ± 1 months; n=101), enrolled at discharge from hospitalization, or in the long-term pathway (6-12 months; mean 10 ± 3 months; n=100) for frail/chronic patients already followed in home care. RESULTS: The most frequent main diagnosis was HF (n=108, 54%), followed by diabetes (30%) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (16%). A Charlson score ≥3 was present in 75% of cases and over 60% were taking at least 7 drugs. Among the social characteristics of the enrolled population, 55% were living alone or with non-familial caregivers, 62% had primary education and 48% were non-self-sufficient. The days of hospitalization were significantly reduced only in the TM arm of the post-acute pathway (20 days of hospitalization avoided for 10 patient-months of follow-up, p=0.03) and the effect was mainly evident in patients with HF (p=0.02). A significant increase in the number of home accesses and telephone contacts were also documented in the TM group (12.7 and 13.7 more home interventions for 10 patient-months of follow-up; p=0.01 and p=0.002 in the post-acute and chronic pathway, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: The SmartCare-FVG project showed in patients with chronic diseases (mainly HF), in the post-acute phase of the disease, to significantly reduce the days of hospitalization with a limited and sustainable increase in the use of nursing home care resources.


Subject(s)
Heart Failure , Telemedicine , Cohort Studies , Heart Failure/therapy , Humans , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Quality of Life
2.
Assist Inferm Ric ; 39(1): 24-30, 2020.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32458827

ABSTRACT

. The contribution of voluntary associations in the process of eliminating mechanical restraint in hospitals. INTRODUCTION: Eliminating the restraint use in fragile people at any age and pathological condition is an ethical, legal, deontological commitment. OBJECTIVE: To describe the attempt to eliminate restraint use with the involvement of voluntary associations in the Trieste Health Authority. METHODS: In 2016, a register of volunteers "Albo dei Volontari art. 13" (Register of Volunteers art. 13) was established, and the voluntary service to which 45 people from 7 voluntary associations have joined, after a training course of 6 weeks. RESULTS: In the three-year period 2017-19 volunteers served in 17 wards assisting 83 patients, with a commitment of 1108 hours. They were required for people with mobilisation problems, but also with problems of companionship, nutrition, disorientation and wandering. These are non-critical situations which, if not properly managed, lead to restraint measures. CONCLUSIONS: Volunteers can be integrated into teams, make an important contribution and lead to a reduction in restraint. The experience could be transferable to other contexts.


Subject(s)
Hospitals , Restraint, Physical/statistics & numerical data , Volunteers , Humans , Italy
3.
Front Psychol ; 7: 2020, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28119644

ABSTRACT

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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