Cited 9 times since 2021 (2.4 per year) source: EuropePMC Patient education and counseling, Volume 105, Issue 5, 25 4 2021, Pages 1123-1129 Experiences with information provision and preferences for decision making of patients with acute stroke. Prick JCM, Zonjee VJ, van Schaik SM, Dahmen R, Garvelink MM, Brouwers PJAM, Saxena R, Keus SHJ, Deijle IA, van Uden-Kraan CF, van der Wees PJ, Van den Berg-Vos RM, Santeon VBHC stroke group
Objective
The aim of this study was to gain insight into experiences of patients with acute stroke regarding information provision and their preferred involvement in decision-making processes during the initial period of hospitalisation.
Methods
A sequential explanatory design was used in two independent cohorts of patients with stroke, starting with a survey after discharge from hospital (cohort 1) followed by observations and structured interviews during hospitalisation (cohort 2). Quantitative data were analysed descriptively.
Results
In total, 72 patients participated in this study (52 in cohort 1 and 20 in cohort 2). During hospitalisation, the majority of the patients were educated about acute stroke and their treatment. Approximately half of the patients preferred to have an active role in the decision-making process, whereas only 21% reported to be actively involved. In cohort 2, 60% of the patients considered themselves capable to carefully consider treatment options.
Conclusions
Active involvement in the acute decision-making process is preferred by approximately half of the patients with acute stroke and most of them consider themselves capable of doing so. However, they experience a limited degree of actual involvement.
Practice implications
Physicians can facilitate patient engagement by explicitly emphasising when a decision has to be made in which the patient's opinion is important.