Health-literacy training for first-year respiratory therapy students: A mixed-methods pilot study

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Respiratory therapists (RTs) should communicate with patients in a way that leads to patients understanding their discharge plans and medical device instructions. The teach-back method is a patient-centered, health-literate technique that allows health care professionals to confirm patient understanding. The purpose of this mixed-methods pilot study was to measure the use of teach-back by first-year undergraduate RT students in a simulation-center experience after a 1-h teach-back skills training. METHODS: First-year RT students’ health literacy knowledge and belief in communication skills were measured using a pre-and post-survey about their knowledge and beliefs. A 1-h health literacy and teach-back skills training lecture (ie, intervention) was delivered after the pre-testing. RT students were then assessed for teach-back use during a regularly scheduled simulation center experience. Their experiences were recorded in a semistructured interview immediately after the simulation-center experience. RESULTS: 14 of 20 RT students used teach-back in the simulation center. Knowledge scores increased from 8.278 to 8.944 postintervention, and the median scores for belief increased from 111 to 117 postintervention. There was a statistically significant postintervention increase in knowledge scores (P

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APA

Ogrodnick, M. M., Feinberg, I., Tighe, E., Czarnonycz, C. C., & Zimmerman, R. D. (2020). Health-literacy training for first-year respiratory therapy students: A mixed-methods pilot study. Respiratory Care, 65(1), 68–74. https://doi.org/10.4187/respcare.06896

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