Low self-efficacy is associated with decreased emergency department use in underserved men with prostate cancer.

Urol Oncol

Department of Urology, David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, CA; Department of Health Policy and Management, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, CA.

Published: January 2016

Background: Self-efficacy has been strongly associated with health behavior and health maintenance. We examined the relationship between patient-provider self-efficacy and emergency department usage in low-income, underinsured, or uninsured patients with prostate cancer.

Methods: We prospectively analyzed quality of life, behavior, and self-efficacy data from men enrolled in a state-funded program providing free prostate cancer care. We summarized patient characteristics stratified by self-efficacy scores (high, mid, and low) and by emergency department visit (any vs. none). We conducted a multivariate repeated measures regression analysis with negative binomial distribution to calculate predicted counts of emergency department visits over time across the self-efficacy strata.

Results: Our cohort included 469 men with a maximum follow-up time of 84 months. Of these men, 70 had visited the emergency department during their enrollment for a total of 118 unique visits. The regression analysis demonstrated a decreasing number of emergency department visits over time for the low (P = 0.0633) and mid (P = 0.0450) self-efficacy groups but not for the high self-efficacy group (P = 0.1155). Pain (22.9%), urinary retention (18.6%), and fever (5.9%) were the most common reasons for emergency department visits.

Conclusions: Patients with low and mid self-efficacy had a decreasing number of emergency department usage over time. Those with high self-efficacy did not follow these trends. Interventions to improve communication between patients and primary treatment teams could prove beneficial in avoiding excess emergency department use.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.urolonc.2015.08.017DOI Listing

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