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Related Concept Videos

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Ethical standards are the backbone of nursing practice, guiding nurses as they interact with patients, families, and colleagues. These standards are crucial for providing safe, empathetic care centered on the patient's needs.
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Updated: Dec 6, 2025

E-Patient Counseling Trial E-PACO: Computer Based Education versus Nurse Counseling for Patients to Prepare for Colonoscopy
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Spanish-Speaking Hispanic Patients' Information-Sharing Preferences During Hospitalization: An Exploratory Pilot

Marge Benham-Hutchins1,2, Sharon A Brown1, Erin E Donovan2,3

  • 1School of Nursing, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States.

Journal of Participatory Medicine
|October 14, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Spanish-speaking Hispanic patients prefer paper-based medical information and desire clear details on medications, treatments, and prognosis. Emotional readiness impacts their ability to seek information, highlighting a need for tailored communication strategies in chronic disease self-management.

Keywords:
Hispaniccancerchronic diseasediabetesself-management

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Area of Science:

  • Health Services Research
  • Patient Experience
  • Health Communication

Background:

  • Effective self-management of chronic conditions necessitates coordinated care across settings.
  • Current hospital initiatives often prioritize provider communication over patient partnership in care.
  • Participatory medicine emphasizes patients' right to be active partners in their healthcare.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore Spanish-speaking Hispanic patients' views on health information exchange during hospitalization.
  • To identify patient-centered information needs for improved self-management support.

Main Methods:

  • Qualitative descriptive pilot study using post-hospitalization focus groups.
  • Conducted in Spanish to capture authentic patient perspectives.
  • Explored patient-identified information needs during their hospital stay.

Main Results:

  • Patients preferred paper-based, Spanish-language medical information.
  • Key information providers were doctors and nurses, often using translators.
  • Patients desired details on medications, treatments, side effects, progress, and discharge timelines.
  • Emotional readiness emerged as a barrier to seeking information.

Conclusions:

  • Participants reported positive experiences and found self-care instructions useful.
  • Language was not identified as a barrier by participants.
  • Further research is needed on how emotional readiness influences the timing of medical information delivery.