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Analyze article and determine cultural category





Id : 589

Author :
Goyal A.A., Tur K., Mann J., Townsend W., Flanders S.A., Chopra V.

Title


Do bedside visual tools improve patient and caregiver satisfaction? A systematic review of the literature

Reference :


Goyal A.A., Tur K., Mann J., Townsend W., Flanders S.A., Chopra V.; Do bedside visual tools improve patient and caregiver satisfaction? A systematic review of the literature ;Journal of Hospital Medicine vol:12 issue: 11 page:930

Link to article https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85037991426&doi=10.12788%2fjhm.2871&partnerID=40&md5=ebcf15def272f00beab26754efdb40ef
Abstract BACKGROUND: Although common, the impact of low-cost bedside visual tools, such as whiteboards, on patient care is unclear. PURPOSE: To systematically review the literature and assess the influence of bedside visual tools on patient satisfaction. DATA SOURCES: Medline, Embase, SCOPUS, Web of Science, CINAHL, and CENTRAL. DATA EXTRACTION: Studies of adult or pediatric hospitalized patients reporting physician identification, understanding of provider roles, patient–provider communication, and satisfaction with care from the use of visual tools were included. Outcomes were categorized as positive, negative, or neutral based on survey responses for identification, communication, and satisfaction. Two reviewers screened studies, extracted data, and assessed the risk of study bias. DATA SYNTHESIS: Sixteen studies met the inclusion criteria. Visual tools included whiteboards (n = 4), physician pictures (n = 7), whiteboard and picture (n = 1), electronic medical record-based patient portals (n = 3), and formatted notepads (n = 1). Tools improved patients’ identification of providers (13/13 studies). The impact on understanding the providers’ roles was largely positive (8/10 studies). Visual tools improved patient–provider communication (4/5 studies) and satisfaction (6/8 studies). In adults, satisfaction varied between positive with the use of whiteboards (2/5 studies) and neutral with pictures (1/5 studies). Satisfaction related to pictures in pediatric patients was either positive (1/3 studies) or neutral (1/3 studies). Differences in tool format (individual pictures vs handouts with pictures of all providers) and study design (randomized vs cohort) may explain variable outcomes. CONCLUSION: The use of bedside visual tools appears to improve patient recognition of providers and patient–provider communication. Future studies that include better design and outcome assessment are necessary before widespread use can be recommended. © 2017 Society of Hospital Medicine.



Results:


                    Category                    

             Certainity            
Heritage 0.0000
Archives 0.0000
Libraries 0.0000
Book and Press 0.0000
Visual Arts 0.0001
Performing Arts 0.0004
Audiovisual and Multimedia 0.9995
Architecture 0.0000
Adverstizing 0.0000
Art crafts 0.0000
General cultural dimension 0.0000
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