Title of article
Telephone follow-up after discharge from the hospital: does it make a difference?
Author/Authors
Janet Bostrom، نويسنده , , Joan Caldwell، نويسنده , , Kay McGuire، نويسنده , , Deanne Everson، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Pages
6
From page
47
To page
52
Abstract
Two systems of telephone follow-up of discharged patients were compared in this 3-month study. All medical and surgical patients on five nursing units of one acute care institution were included, yielding a sample of over 1,400 patients. One group of patients was called 2 to 3 days after discharge; another group received a brochure describing a nurse-run telephone service they could call. A third group of patients received no intervention. More than 90% of patients who were called had questions about self-care and recovery at home. Only nine patients initiated calls to the nurse telephone service. The three groups did not differ in patient satisfaction with health education or readmission rates within 30 days of discharge. This study suggests that patients have continued health education needs after discharge but are unlikely to actively seek needed information from a hospital-based telephone service.
Journal title
Applied Nursing Research
Serial Year
1996
Journal title
Applied Nursing Research
Record number
484127
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