Lacunae in patient knowledge about oral anticoagulant treatment: results of a questionnaire survey.

Jisha K Joshua, Naveen Kakkar
Author Information
  1. Jisha K Joshua: Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, CA USA.
  2. Naveen Kakkar: Department of Pathology, Christian Medical College and Hospital, Brown Road, Ludhiana, 141 008 Punjab India.

Abstract

Oral anticoagulation therapy is affected by the drug used, intensity of anticoagulation, physician's experience, patient compliance, laboratory testing and patient education. Patient education is a key factor in optimal anticoagulation and safety in patients on oral anticoagulant therapy. This study was done to assess the knowledge of patients regarding oral anticoagulant therapy in the outpatient setting. This prospective study was done over 2 months in 101 patients on outpatient oral anticoagulant therapy. A 20-point questionnaire on various aspects of oral anticoagulation therapy was administered to assess their knowledge. The answers were graded on a scale of 0-1. Scores were then added up to quantify the knowledge status in each patient. Descriptive statistics and Student's t test was used to analyse the data. The mean knowledge score among patients was 9.4/18 (52.2 %). More than half (52.8 %) of the patients had a score of <9. More than half (54.4 %) of the patients had adequate knowledge-(>80 % score-5.5/7) about the critical (must know) questions regarding OAT. Patients with age ≥60 years had lower mean scores compared to those <60 years of age (p = 0.028). Illiteracy was also associated (p < 0.0001) with poor scores. There are significant lacunae in the knowledge about oral anticoagulation among patients on outpatient treatment. Older age and illiteracy were associated with poor knowledge among patients. More emphasis needs to be given to the vital aspect of patient education to make this therapy safer for patients.

Keywords

References

  1. J Intern Med. 1994 Aug;236(2):143-52 [PMID: 8046313]
  2. Int J Qual Health Care. 2001 Jun;13(3):209-13 [PMID: 11476145]
  3. J Prim Care Community Health. 2012 Jan 1;3(1):65-74 [PMID: 23804857]
  4. J Manag Care Pharm. 2011 Mar;17(2):133-42 [PMID: 21348546]
  5. Saudi Med J. 2010 Jun;31(6):672-7 [PMID: 20563367]
  6. Thromb J. 2012 Aug 30;10(1):17 [PMID: 22935243]
  7. Ir Med J. 2003 Jul-Aug;96(7):211-3 [PMID: 14518585]
  8. Ann Cardiol Angeiol (Paris). 2003 Nov;52(5):297-301 [PMID: 14714343]
  9. Ann Pharmacother. 2003 Jan;37(1):34-9 [PMID: 12503930]
  10. Qual Health Care. 1994 Jun;3(2):79-85 [PMID: 10137589]
  11. Haematologica. 1997 Nov-Dec;82(6):713-7 [PMID: 9499674]
  12. Br J Haematol. 2011 Aug;154(3):311-24 [PMID: 21671894]
  13. Arch Intern Med. 1993 Mar 8;153(5):586-96 [PMID: 8439222]
  14. Blood Coagul Fibrinolysis. 2005 Apr;16(3):227-30 [PMID: 15795545]
  15. J Cardiovasc Nurs. 2006 May-Jun;21(3):169-75; quiz 176-7 [PMID: 16699355]
  16. Haematologica. 2002 Oct;87(10):1081-6 [PMID: 12368164]
  17. J R Soc Med. 2003 Apr;96(4):175-9 [PMID: 12668704]

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0patientstherapyknowledgeoralanticoagulationpatientanticoagulanteducationoutpatientamongageOralusedPatientstudydoneassessregardingquestionnairemeanscore52halfscoresassociatedpooraffecteddrugintensityphysician'sexperiencecompliancelaboratorytestingkeyfactoroptimalsafetysettingprospective2 months10120-pointvariousaspectsadministeredanswersgradedscale0-1ScoresaddedquantifystatusDescriptivestatisticsStudent'sttestanalysedata94/182 %8 %<9544 %adequateknowledge->80 %score-55/7criticalmustknowquestionsOATPatients≥60 yearslowercompared<60 yearsp = 0028Illiteracyalsop < 00001significantlacunaetreatmentOlderilliteracyemphasisneedsgivenvitalaspectmakesaferLacunaetreatment:resultssurveyEducationKnowledgeanticogulationQuestionnaire

Similar Articles

Cited By