The identification of patient beliefs realtive to durg education needs on a rehabilitation unit

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Publication Type dissertation
School or College College of Pharmacy
Department Pharmacology & Toxicology
Author Orlando, Patricia Lynn
Title The identification of patient beliefs realtive to durg education needs on a rehabilitation unit
Date 1985-06
Description An interpretation of medication education begins with the realization that education is not an autonomous self-regulating system but rather is a human creation complete with its own human motives, human goals, and human achievements. The education is created, rejuvenated, and maintained by human beings. The laws and organizations which comprise education have not only relied upon that character of human nature doing the discovering. Ideally, experienced health care professionals who wish to personally evaluate a new patient education method will spontaneously approach the patient who will be experiencing the ultimate effects of this new education design. However, before new patient education learning methods can be designed and implemented, one must seriously evaluate the goals and objectives of this educational technique. Health care professionals seek as much satisfaction of needs within their medical work as within their private and social lives. Their persistent curiosity and desire to understand, explain, and systematize are responsible for numerous scientific advances which are enjoyed by the medical community. the satisfaction of professional needs involves the ultimate goal of not only treatment and potential cure of medical problems but also the nurturing of the patient's understanding about his medical conditions in general and medication education in particular. the medical literature has provided substantiation that health care professionals agree on general guidelines for patient medication education. having a well established and progressive knowledge base, these professionals have projected their own perspectives about medication education with little appreciation for the education needs felt by the patient. These professional perspectives have served to subordinate the patient who has no medical knowledge and relies on expect opinion to alleviate sickness. However, the patient does have beliefs about health care in general and about medication use in particular. Although the projected educational perspectives have been a reflection of professional need satisfaction, health care professionals have failed to satisfy patient needs through neglect to acknowledge patient beliefs which form a framework for medication education needs.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject MESH Research Design; Patient Education as Topic; Interviews as Topic; Questionnaires; Culture; Religion; Patient Medication Knowledge; Patient Compliance; Medication Adherence; Rehabilitation; Sick Role; Activities of Daily Living; Self Care; Patient Satisfaction; Pharmacists; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; Attitude to Health; Attitude to Death; Patient Beliefs; Hierarchy of Needs
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Dissertation Name Doctor of Pharmacy
Language eng
Relation is Version of Digital reproduction of The identification of patient beliefs realtive to durg education needs on a rehabilitation unit
Rights Management Copyright © Patricia Lynn Orlando 1985
Format Medium application/pdf
ARK ark:/87278/s62r46hf
Setname ir_etd
ID 195943
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s62r46hf
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