Maher Dermot P, Wong Waylan, Woo Pauline, Padilla Cesar, Zhang Xiao, Shamloo Bahman, Rosner Howard, Wender Ronald, Yumul Roya, Louy Charles
Department of Anesthesia, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California.
Pain Med. 2015 Apr;16(4):791-801. doi: 10.1111/pme.12651. Epub 2014 Dec 28.
To determine perioperative treatments and events associated with Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey responses.
Retrospective analysis.
Single tertiary care, academic, urban, level-1 trauma center.
Final cohort represents 2,758 consecutive surgical inpatients meeting criteria for evaluation by HCAHPS.
Responses to four HCAHPS questions were compared against 19 perioperative treatments and events.
Positive and negative responses to HCAHPS questions.
Patients responding affirmatively with a "9" or "10" to "what number would you use to rate this hospital" were associated with decreased lengths of hospitalization, greater lengths of surgery, decreased intraoperative opioid equianalgesic doses, greater preoperative midazolam doses, shorter post anesthesia care unit (PACU) lengths of stay and decreased last PACU numerical rating scale (NRS) pain scores. Patients responding affirmatively with "yes, definitely" to "would you recommend this hospital to your family" were associated with decreased last PACU NRS pain scores. Patients responding affirmatively with "yes, always" to "How often did the hospital staff do everything to help with your pain" were associated with decreased hospital lengths of stay, decreased chronic benzodiazepine use, greater chronic NSAID use, and decreased PACU lengths of stay. Patients responding affirmatively with "yes, always" to "how often was your pain well controlled" were associated with decreased chronic opioid use, decreased chronic benzodiazepine use, greater chronic NSAID use, increased length of surgery, decreased last PACU NRS pain score, and decreased first PACU NRS pain scores. Subgroup analysis of patients undergoing different types of surgery further characterized factors associated with HCAHPS responses among different surgical populations.
These data suggest that demographic factors, preadmission medications, and PACU pain scores but not analgesic medications are associated with patient satisfaction with regards to both pain management and overall satisfaction.
确定与医疗服务提供者和系统消费者评估(HCAHPS)调查回复相关的围手术期治疗和事件。
回顾性分析。
单一的三级医疗、学术性城市一级创伤中心。
最终队列包括2758名连续的外科住院患者,他们符合HCAHPS评估标准。
将对四个HCAHPS问题的回答与19种围手术期治疗和事件进行比较。
对HCAHPS问题的肯定和否定回答。
对“您会用什么数字来评价这家医院”回答为“9”或“10”的患者,住院时间缩短、手术时间延长、术中阿片类等效镇痛剂量减少、术前咪达唑仑剂量增加、麻醉后恢复室(PACU)停留时间缩短以及PACU最后数字评分量表(NRS)疼痛评分降低。对“您会向家人推荐这家医院吗”回答为“肯定会”的患者,PACU最后NRS疼痛评分降低。对“医院工作人员帮助您缓解疼痛的频率有多高”回答为“总是”的患者,住院时间缩短、慢性苯二氮䓬类药物使用减少、慢性非甾体抗炎药使用增加以及PACU停留时间缩短。对“您的疼痛得到良好控制的频率有多高”回答为“总是”的患者,慢性阿片类药物使用减少、慢性苯二氮䓬类药物使用减少、慢性非甾体抗炎药使用增加、手术时间延长、PACU最后NRS疼痛评分降低以及PACU首次NRS疼痛评分降低。对接受不同类型手术的患者进行亚组分析,进一步明确了不同手术人群中与HCAHPS回复相关的因素。
这些数据表明,人口统计学因素、入院前用药和PACU疼痛评分而非镇痛药物与患者在疼痛管理和总体满意度方面的满意度相关。