术前患者教育干预提高妇科手术满意度和减少资源利用的随机对照试验

Alexandre Buckley de Meritens, C. Baptiste, J. Hou, W. Burke, J. Wright, A. Tergas
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摘要

在最初的手术咨询中,患者可能会对他们所得到的关于他们的诊断和手术计划的信息感到不知所措。我们希望确定术前患者教育干预是否能提高患者满意度并优化出院后医疗服务的使用。方法:我们将接受腹腔镜或开腹手术的妇女随机分为标准护理组(对照组)和术前教育干预组。术前教育干预包括:1)一份关于住院和门诊康复信息的讲义,2)术前电话回顾讲义并回答问题。术后随访时,患者完成患者满意度问卷(PSQ-18),包括满意度、人际交往方式、沟通、与医生相处的时间和医生的可及性。在手术后的前2周内,对电话次数、急诊科就诊次数和术后未安排的门诊就诊次数进行量化。采用描述性统计和t检验进行分析。结果:连续62例患者随机分组,干预组31例,对照组31例。在队列中,35名患者接受了腹腔镜检查,21名患者接受了剖腹手术,6名患者退出或取消了手术。收集术后患者满意度问卷40份,干预组20份,对照组20份(有效率71%)。干预与患者满意度的提高有关。在LSC组中,干预改善了患者对医生人际交往方式、沟通方式和与医生相处时间的感知(p < 0.05)。干预组仅1例(3.5%)患者术后(开腹、切口分离)就诊,对照组5例(17.8%)患者(4例开腹、1例开腹,p < 0.05),均因轻微主诉(疼痛、焦虑、切口)就诊。结论:在我们的随机试验中,这种低成本、可行的术前教育干预提高了患者对外科医生沟通技巧的认知,降低了术后医疗资源的利用率。这种影响在接受微创手术的女性中最为明显。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of a Preoperative Patient Education Intervention to Improve Satisfaction and Reduce Resource Utilization in Gynecologic Surgery
During the initial surgical consult patients may feel overwhelmed by the information they are given regarding their diagnosis and surgical plan. We looked to determine if a preoperative patient educational intervention would improve patient satisfaction and optimize use of medical services after discharge. Methods: We randomized women undergoing major gynecologic surgery by laparoscopy or laparotomy, to standard of care (Control) or a preoperative educational intervention. The pre-operative educational intervention consisted of: 1) a handout with information on inpatient and outpatient recovery and 2) a preoperative phone-call to review the handout and answer questions. At the post-operative visit, patients completed a Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire (PSQ-18), addressing satisfaction, interpersonal manner, communication, time spent with doctors and physician accessibility. The number of phone calls, emergency department visits and unscheduled post-operative clinic visits were quantified during the first 2 weeks after surgery. Descriptive statistics and t-tests were used for analysis.Results: 62 consecutive patients were randomized: 31 to intervention and 31 to the control group. Within the cohort 35 patients underwent laparoscopy and 21 laparotomy, 6 patients withdrew or cancelled their surgery. Forty postoperative patient satisfaction questionnaires were collected, 20 in the intervention group and 20 in the control group (response rate 71%). Intervention was associated to increased patient satisfaction. In the LSC group, the intervention improved patients’ perception of their physicians’ interpersonal manners, communication and time spent with the doctor (p < 0.05). Only one patient (3.5%) in the intervention group visited the ER post-operatively (laparotomy, wound separation) compared to 5 (17.8%) control patients (4 laparoscopy, 1 laparotomy, p < 0.05), all for minor complaints (pain, anxiety, incision).Conclusions: In our randomized trial this low-cost, feasible pre-operative educational intervention improves patients’ perception of their surgeons’ communication skills and decreased post-operative healthcare resource utilization. The effects are most pronounced in women undergoing minimally invasive surgery.
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