Authors

  1. McKerrocher, Paul R. DNP, MS, CRNA
  2. Hines, Cheryl B. EdD, MSN, CRNA

Abstract

The purpose of this study was improving patient compliance with the 2014 American College of Cardiologists/American Heart Association Joint Task Force Clinical Practice Guidelines recommendation regarding continuation of antihypertensive medications throughout the perioperative period. A patient education initiative, using the teach-back method of instruction, was implemented and evaluated. Effectiveness of instruction was measured by tracking hypertension requiring pharmacological intervention, procedure delay, and procedure cancellation. Pre- and postintervention data were collected from electronic health records using a retrospective cohort design. A [chi]2 analysis compared pre- and postintervention groups. The p value was calculated using the [chi]2 analysis, ([chi]2 [1, N = 1,044] = 7.71, p = .00548). No incidence of case delay or cancellation was experienced in either test group. Incidence of patients requiring preprocedural pharmacological intervention decreased by 70.5%. Statistically significant decreases in pharmacological treatment of hypertension supported permanent inclusion of the antihypertensive patient teaching method at the project gastroenterology clinic.