1 / 15

Client and Consumer Education

Client and Consumer Education. Concept 39 Potter, chapter 25. Terms. Your client education in the hospital and HH may involve a variety of ages. Pedagogy —teaching children Androgogy —teaching adults Geragogy —teaching older adults. This is where your Senior Center project focus will be.

jemima
Download Presentation

Client and Consumer Education

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Client and Consumer Education Concept 39 Potter, chapter 25

  2. Terms • Your client education in the hospital and HH may involve a variety of ages. • Pedagogy—teaching children • Androgogy—teaching adults • Geragogy—teaching older adults. This is where your Senior Center project focus will be.

  3. Client vs consumer education • Same readings in both concept books (Book 1, pp. 670-673 and Book 2, pp. 2251-2259). The pages in Book 1 are found scattered throughout the pages in Book 2. • Terms can be interchangeable, but the minute difference may be that we sometimes think of “client” as a single person and “consumer” as any person in the community whether or not they are a “patient.”It seems like a broader term as in anyone who is subjected to health education and advertisement thru the mass media. • But the term “client” can be used to define a person, a family, or a community. • Therefore, we can use these terms synonymously for our purposes.

  4. Effective Teaching • Assesses motivation, readiness, and abilities of learner • Is timed appropriately in optimum environment • Holds learner’s interest—is relevant • Involves learner • Fosters a positive self-concept • Gives positive feedback and support

  5. Effective Teaching • Has realistic goals and objectives • Moves from simple to complex • Involves repetition • Is accurate and current • Is developmentally appropriate • Uses several methods (cognitive, psychomotor, affective)

  6. Adult learners • Must perceive a need to know • Must be able to relate information to real-life • Need to be respected as capable, self-directed, and responsible for their own decisions • Have more life experiences to bring to the discussion • Prefer activities that foster problem-solving, simulation, discussion, case-study analysis, and hands-on application • Motivated to learn if it helps them perform tasks or deal with problems they confront • More driven by internal pressures to improve their quality of life, not by external pressures to achieve materialistic goals

  7. Areas for Education • The approach may be planned, as in your project, or it may be a “teachable moment” you encounter in your everyday routine. • The areas you may cover will be varied according to the setting and could include the following:

  8. Areas for Education • Health promotion (primary prevention) • Prevention of illness and injury (secondary prevention) • Restoration of health (follow-up care) • Adaptation to changes (rehab, grief counseling, age-related changes)

  9. Geragogy: AKA, Your Senior Center Project • Your focus will primarily be cognitive. Consider the following cognitive strategies (p. 2263): • Explanation • Encouraging and answering questions • Discovery • Group discussions • Printed or audiovisual materials • Role playing

  10. Cognitive Teaching Strategies • Explanation is teacher driven and has the lowest retention rate. • In discovery, the teacher is the guide, but the learner is actively engaged and retention is high. • Printed or audiovisual materials need to meet certain guidelines. • Role playing involves learner with high retention, but environment must be safe.

  11. Teaching Older Adults • Begin and end with important info • Present slowly; allow enough “soaking” time • Speak in lower tone • Present only crucial and specific info • Repeat important info • Relate new material to life experiences • Use groups

  12. Developing Written Materials for the Older Adult • Use large, bold print; at least 14 font • Use buff-colored paper, not white, blue, or green • High letter to background contrast • Present at 5th grade reading level • Use easy, common words with 1-2 syllables

  13. Developing Written Materials • Short, bulleted sentences • Avoid all caps • Priority info first • Simple, limited illustrations • Leave plenty of white space • Best to only have 1 page per topic—less boring, less time-consuming to read, easier to retain

  14. Using the FOG Method (p. 2258) • Assesses readability of written information. • Steps: • Count words in sample (preferably around 100) • Count # of sentences • Words/sentences = average # of words per sentence

  15. The FOG Method • Count # of words that are three or more syllables not counting proper names or words • Three syllable words/total words = % of hard words • Average words per sentence + % of three-syllable words x 0.04 = number of years of education the reader needs to successfully read the material.

More Related