‘Teach-back’ is a simple communication tool that improves disease knowledge in people with chronic hepatitis B – a pilot randomized controlled study

Abstract Background The low diagnosis rate and poor access to clinical care among people with CHB is a major barrier to reducing HBV-related morbidity and mortality in Australia. One explanation for this is a lack of disease-specific knowledge among people living with CHB. Health literacy has been s...

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Main Authors: Sophie Tran, Gabrielle Bennett, Jacqui Richmond, Tin Nguyen, Marno Ryan, Thai Hong, Jessica Howell, Barbara Demediuk, Paul Desmond, Sally Bell, Alexander Thompson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
HBV
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-7658-4
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spelling doaj-62a618cbaf3d4f7c9b63bc24f8cf24a72020-11-25T03:56:34ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582019-10-011911910.1186/s12889-019-7658-4‘Teach-back’ is a simple communication tool that improves disease knowledge in people with chronic hepatitis B – a pilot randomized controlled studySophie Tran0Gabrielle Bennett1Jacqui Richmond2Tin Nguyen3Marno Ryan4Thai Hong5Jessica Howell6Barbara Demediuk7Paul Desmond8Sally Bell9Alexander Thompson10Department of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneDepartment of Gastroenterology, St. Vincent’s Hospital MelbourneAbstract Background The low diagnosis rate and poor access to clinical care among people with CHB is a major barrier to reducing HBV-related morbidity and mortality in Australia. One explanation for this is a lack of disease-specific knowledge among people living with CHB. Health literacy has been shown to be important for maximising engagement with medical care and adherence to recommended management. The ‘teach-back’ communication strategy has been shown to improve patient understanding in other clinical areas. This study aims to assess disease-specific knowledge; and evaluate the efficacy of the teach-back strategy for improving HBV knowledge, compared to a standard medical consultation. Method A randomized pilot study was conducted between February and June 2017. Participants were recruited from the liver clinic at an inner-city tertiary hospital. English-speaking patients aged ≥18 years and diagnosed with CHB were eligible for the study. Participants were randomised to a control group (medical specialist appointment) and intervention group (teach-back). Knowledge was assessed at baseline, immediately post-intervention and at one month using a validated questionnaire. Participants in the intervention group received a one-on-one teach-back session about CHB. The main outcome measure was a combined knowledge score of the domains assessed – transmission, natural history, epidemiology and prevention and clinical management. Results Seventy participants were recruited (control n = 32, teach-back n = 38). Mean baseline knowledge score was 19.1 out of 23 with 55 (79%) participants scoring ≥17.3 (defined as high knowledge) (7). Sub-analysis of CHB knowledge domains identified focal deficits concerning transmission and whether HBV is curable. Knowledge scores were found to be positively associated with English proficiency and antiviral treatment experience (p < 0.05). Teach-back was associated with a significant increase in CHB knowledge at early recall (22.5 vs 18.7, p < 0.001) and at 1-month follow-up (21.9 vs 18.7, p < 0.001); there was no improvement in CHB knowledge associated with standard clinical consultant (early recall: 19.6 vs 19.4, p = 0.49, one-month follow-up: 19.5 vs 19.4, p = 0.94). Conclusion In a tertiary hospital liver clinic population, baseline knowledge about CHB was good, but there were focal deficits concerning transmission and potential for cure. Teach-back was associated with improvement in CHB knowledge and it is a simple communication tool suitable for incorporation into a standard medical consultation.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-7658-4Health literacyHBVTeach-backEducationCommunicationLiver
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophie Tran
Gabrielle Bennett
Jacqui Richmond
Tin Nguyen
Marno Ryan
Thai Hong
Jessica Howell
Barbara Demediuk
Paul Desmond
Sally Bell
Alexander Thompson
spellingShingle Sophie Tran
Gabrielle Bennett
Jacqui Richmond
Tin Nguyen
Marno Ryan
Thai Hong
Jessica Howell
Barbara Demediuk
Paul Desmond
Sally Bell
Alexander Thompson
‘Teach-back’ is a simple communication tool that improves disease knowledge in people with chronic hepatitis B – a pilot randomized controlled study
BMC Public Health
Health literacy
HBV
Teach-back
Education
Communication
Liver
author_facet Sophie Tran
Gabrielle Bennett
Jacqui Richmond
Tin Nguyen
Marno Ryan
Thai Hong
Jessica Howell
Barbara Demediuk
Paul Desmond
Sally Bell
Alexander Thompson
author_sort Sophie Tran
title ‘Teach-back’ is a simple communication tool that improves disease knowledge in people with chronic hepatitis B – a pilot randomized controlled study
title_short ‘Teach-back’ is a simple communication tool that improves disease knowledge in people with chronic hepatitis B – a pilot randomized controlled study
title_full ‘Teach-back’ is a simple communication tool that improves disease knowledge in people with chronic hepatitis B – a pilot randomized controlled study
title_fullStr ‘Teach-back’ is a simple communication tool that improves disease knowledge in people with chronic hepatitis B – a pilot randomized controlled study
title_full_unstemmed ‘Teach-back’ is a simple communication tool that improves disease knowledge in people with chronic hepatitis B – a pilot randomized controlled study
title_sort ‘teach-back’ is a simple communication tool that improves disease knowledge in people with chronic hepatitis b – a pilot randomized controlled study
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background The low diagnosis rate and poor access to clinical care among people with CHB is a major barrier to reducing HBV-related morbidity and mortality in Australia. One explanation for this is a lack of disease-specific knowledge among people living with CHB. Health literacy has been shown to be important for maximising engagement with medical care and adherence to recommended management. The ‘teach-back’ communication strategy has been shown to improve patient understanding in other clinical areas. This study aims to assess disease-specific knowledge; and evaluate the efficacy of the teach-back strategy for improving HBV knowledge, compared to a standard medical consultation. Method A randomized pilot study was conducted between February and June 2017. Participants were recruited from the liver clinic at an inner-city tertiary hospital. English-speaking patients aged ≥18 years and diagnosed with CHB were eligible for the study. Participants were randomised to a control group (medical specialist appointment) and intervention group (teach-back). Knowledge was assessed at baseline, immediately post-intervention and at one month using a validated questionnaire. Participants in the intervention group received a one-on-one teach-back session about CHB. The main outcome measure was a combined knowledge score of the domains assessed – transmission, natural history, epidemiology and prevention and clinical management. Results Seventy participants were recruited (control n = 32, teach-back n = 38). Mean baseline knowledge score was 19.1 out of 23 with 55 (79%) participants scoring ≥17.3 (defined as high knowledge) (7). Sub-analysis of CHB knowledge domains identified focal deficits concerning transmission and whether HBV is curable. Knowledge scores were found to be positively associated with English proficiency and antiviral treatment experience (p < 0.05). Teach-back was associated with a significant increase in CHB knowledge at early recall (22.5 vs 18.7, p < 0.001) and at 1-month follow-up (21.9 vs 18.7, p < 0.001); there was no improvement in CHB knowledge associated with standard clinical consultant (early recall: 19.6 vs 19.4, p = 0.49, one-month follow-up: 19.5 vs 19.4, p = 0.94). Conclusion In a tertiary hospital liver clinic population, baseline knowledge about CHB was good, but there were focal deficits concerning transmission and potential for cure. Teach-back was associated with improvement in CHB knowledge and it is a simple communication tool suitable for incorporation into a standard medical consultation.
topic Health literacy
HBV
Teach-back
Education
Communication
Liver
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-7658-4
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