英文摘要 |
Background: '' Natural body movement and Patient Handling Technique'' is a non-dragging and non-shifting technique that uses body natural posture and strength to easily complete the tasks of moving or turning over a patient. There is not yet an interventional study on this care and health education in the nation. Aim: Discussion on the positioning knowledge, skills, and attitude of the primary caregiver with the“Natural body movement and Patient Handling technique”, to helping caring for bedridden patients. Methods: Adopting the quasi-experimental design to facilitate sampling, and selecting the bedfast patients and their primary caregivers who meet the conditions in a home care unit, and divide them into an experimental group(Natural body movement and Patient Handling technique used multimedia learning with CD-Containing that help demonstration drills and teach back), and a control group(health education leaflet), 30 persons in each group, collected pre-test data with a self-developed questionnaire, the first post-test is done immediately after the intervention, and the second post-test is done after another 4 weeks. Statistical analysis is carried out by descriptive and inferential statistics and repeated measures single-factor dependent variance analysis. Results: The study comes to a significant difference(p<0.05)that the '' Natural body movement and Patient Handling technique used multimedia learning with CD-Containing that help demonstration drills and teach back '' by the main caregiver of bedfast patients had better knowledge, skills, and attitudes in performing patient positioning than the control group who only received oral instructions from the health education leaflet. The main reason that the experimental group is better the learner. Because this can strengthen the main caregiver’s visual attention. It also help caregiver to cooperate with the demonstration drills and teach-back lesson. It thus helps in memorizing and learning this skill. Conclusion: The intervention of natural care technique has a significant effect on the knowledge, skills, and attitudes of primary caregivers. In the future, we can pragmatically promote the teaching of Natural body movement and Patient Handling Technique, improve the caring knowledge and skills of caregivers, and achieve better health care services. |