PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Implementation of Patient-Centered Education for Chronic-Disease Management in Uganda: An Effectiveness Study.

  • Trishul Siddharthan,
  • Tracy Rabin,
  • Maureen E Canavan,
  • Faith Nassali,
  • Phillip Kirchhoff,
  • Robert Kalyesubula,
  • Steven Coca,
  • Asghar Rastegar,
  • Felix Knauf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166411
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
p. e0166411

Abstract

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The majority of non-communicable disease related deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. Patient-centered care is an essential component of chronic disease management in high income settings.To examine feasibility of implementation of a validated patient-centered education tool among patients with heart failure in Uganda.Mixed-methods, prospective cohort.A private and public cardiology clinic in Mulago National Referral and Teaching Hospital, Kampala, Uganda.Adults with a primary diagnosis of heart failure.PocketDoktor Educational Booklets with patient-centered health education.The primary outcomes were the change in Patient Activation Measure (PAM-13), as well as the acceptability of the PocketDoktor intervention, and feasibility of implementing patient-centered education in outpatient clinical settings. Secondary outcomes included the change in satisfaction with overall clinical care and doctor-patient communication.A total of 105 participants were enrolled at two different clinics: the Mulago Outpatient Department (public) and the Uganda Heart Institute (private). 93 participants completed follow up at 3 months and were included in analysis. The primary analysis showed improved patient activation measure scores regarding disease-specific knowledge, treatment options and prevention of exacerbations among both groups (mean change 0.94 [SD = 1.01], 1.02 [SD = 1.15], and 0.92 [SD = 0.89] among private paying patients and 1.98 [SD = 0.98], 1.93 [SD = 1.02], and 1.45 [SD = 1.02] among public paying patients, p<0.001 for all values) after exposure to the intervention; this effect was significantly larger among indigent patients. Participants reported that materials were easy to read, that they had improved knowledge of disease, and stated improved communication with physicians.Patient-centered medical education can improve confidence in self-management as well as satisfaction with doctor-patient communication and overall care in Uganda. Our results show that printed booklets are locally appropriate, highly acceptable and feasible to implement in an LMIC outpatient setting across socioeconomic groups.