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Acceptance of a Pre-visit Intervention to Engage African American Glaucoma Patients during Visits

Authors :
Betsy Sleath
Delesha M. Carpenter
Scott A. Davis
Donald L. Budenz
Kelly W. Muir
Maria S. Romero
Charles Lee
Gail Tudor
Nacire Garcia
Abena A. Adjei
Alan L. Robin
Source :
Optometry and vision science : official publication of the American Academy of Optometry. 99(12)
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The glaucoma question prompt list/video intervention was well received by patients. Eighty-seven percent of patients recommended that other patients should watch the educational video before their visits, and 89% said that other patients should complete the question prompt list before visits.The objectives of this study were to (a) describe patient feedback on a glaucoma question prompt list/video intervention designed to motivate African American patients to be more engaged during visits and (b) examine patient demographics associated with acceptance of the intervention.We are conducting a randomized controlled trial of a glaucoma question prompt list/video intervention. African American patients with glaucoma were enrolled and assigned to a control group or an intervention group where they watched a video emphasizing the importance of asking questions and received a prompt list to complete before visits. All patients were interviewed after visits and are being followed up for 12 months.One hundred eighty-nine African American patients with glaucoma were enrolled into the larger trial. Of the 93 patients randomized to the intervention group, 89% said that patients should complete the prompt lists before visits, and 87% recommended that patients should watch the video before visits. Older patients were significantly less likely to believe that other patients should watch the video before their visits (t = -3.7, P = .04). Patients with fewer years of education were significantly more likely to rate the video as being more useful than patients with more years of education (Pearson correlation, -0.27; P = .01). Patients who reported being less adherent on the visual analog scale were more likely to rate the video as being more useful (Pearson correlation, -0.23; P = .03).This study demonstrates that the question prompt list/video was accepted by the majority of African American patients who received the intervention.

Subjects

Subjects :
Ophthalmology
Optometry

Details

ISSN :
15389235
Volume :
99
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Optometry and vision science : official publication of the American Academy of Optometry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d2026418539540dab874b2a9a4e3ad52