Crump Trafford, Wing Kevin, Bansback Nick, Sutherland Jason M
Centre for Health Services and Policy Research, School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
BMC Surg. 2015 Jan 15;15(1):4. doi: 10.1186/1471-2482-15-4.
The federal and provincial governments in Canada have invested an enormous amount of resources to measure, report and reduce surgical wait times. Yet these measures under-report the wait period that patients' actually experience, because they do not capture the length of time a patient spends waiting to see the surgeon for a surgical assessment. This unmeasured time is referred to as the "wait one" (W1). Little is known about W1 and the effects that this has on patients' health. Similarly, it is not understood whether patients waiting for surgical assessment actually want or need surgery. Existing administrative and clinical dataset do not capture information on health and decision-making while the patient is waiting for care form a specialist. The objective of this proposed study is to understand the impact that W1 for elective surgeries has on the health of patients and to determine whether this time can be reduced.
METHODS/DESIGN: A prospective survey design will be used to measure the health of patients waiting for surgical assessment. Working with the support of the surgical specialities in Vancouver Coastal Health, we will survey patients immediately after being referred for surgical assessment, and every four months thereafter, until they are seen by the surgeon.Validated survey instruments will be used, including: generic and condition-specific health status questionnaires, pain and depression assessments. Other factors that will be measured include: patients' knowledge about their condition, and their desired autonomy in the decision making process. We have piloted data collection in one surgical specialty in order to demonstrate feasibility.
The results from this study will be used to quantify changes in patients' health while they wait for surgical assessment. Based on this, policy- and decision-makers could design care interventions during W1, aimed at mitigating any negative health consequences associated with waiting. The results from this study will also be used to better understand whether there are factors that predict patients' desire to proceed to surgery. These could be used to guide future research into experimenting with interventions to minimize inappropriate referrals and where they are best targeted.
加拿大联邦和省级政府投入了大量资源来衡量、报告和缩短手术等待时间。然而,这些措施并未充分反映患者实际经历的等待期,因为它们没有计入患者等待外科医生进行手术评估的时间长度。这段未被测量的时间被称为“等待一”(W1)。人们对W1及其对患者健康的影响知之甚少。同样,也不清楚等待手术评估的患者是否真的想要或需要手术。现有的行政和临床数据集并未收集患者等待专科护理期间的健康和决策信息。本拟议研究的目的是了解择期手术的W1对患者健康的影响,并确定这段时间是否可以缩短。
方法/设计:将采用前瞻性调查设计来衡量等待手术评估的患者的健康状况。在温哥华沿海卫生区各外科专科的支持下,我们将在患者被转介进行手术评估后立即对其进行调查,并在此后每四个月进行一次调查,直至他们见到外科医生。将使用经过验证的调查工具,包括:通用和特定疾病的健康状况问卷、疼痛和抑郁评估。其他将被测量的因素包括:患者对自身病情的了解,以及他们在决策过程中期望的自主权。我们已经在一个外科专科进行了数据收集试点,以证明其可行性。
本研究的结果将用于量化患者等待手术评估期间健康状况的变化。基于此,政策制定者和决策者可以在W1期间设计护理干预措施,旨在减轻与等待相关的任何负面健康后果。本研究的结果还将用于更好地了解是否存在预测患者进行手术意愿的因素。这些因素可用于指导未来的研究,以试验干预措施,尽量减少不适当的转诊以及确定最佳的干预目标。