Steffens Nicole M, Tucholka Jennifer L, Nabozny Michael J, Schmick Andrea E, Brasel Karen J, Schwarze Margaret L
Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin, Madison2Denver Public Health, Denver Health and Hospital Authority, Denver, Colorado.
Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin, Madison.
JAMA Surg. 2016 Oct 1;151(10):938-945. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2016.1308.
Older patients are at greater risk for postoperative complications, yet they are less likely than younger patients to ask questions about surgery.
To design an intervention to improve preoperative decision making and manage postoperative expectations.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A Patient and Family Advisory Council (PFAC) was created to help identify preoperative decisional needs. The PFAC included 4 men and women who had previous experience with high-risk surgery as older patients or their family members; the PFAC met monthly at a local library from May 2014 to April 2015 to examine findings from a prior qualitative study and to integrate themes with PFAC members' experiences. Patient observations included 91 recorded conversations between patients and surgeons and 61 patient interviews before and after surgery. The PFAC members and other stakeholders evaluated 118 publicly available questions and selected 12 corresponding to identified needs to generate a question prompt list (QPL). Three focus groups, including 31 community members from diverse backgrounds, were conducted at community centers in Madison and Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to refine the QPL. A clinical pilot with 42 patients considering surgery was conducted in one outpatient surgical clinic in Madison.
Generation of a QPL to address patients' preoperative informational and decisional needs.
Through exploration of qualitative data, the PFAC noted 3 critical problems. Patients and family members believed surgery had to be done, were surprised that postoperative recovery was difficult, and lacked knowledge about the perioperative use of advance directives. The PFAC identified a need for more information and decisional support during preoperative conversations that included clarification of treatment options, setting postoperative expectations, and advance care planning. The following 3 question prompt categories arose: "Should I have surgery?" "What should I expect if everything goes well?" and "What happens if things go wrong?" The final list included 11 questions within these domains, was understandable in English and Spanish, and was acceptable to patients in the clinic.
Through direct engagement of stakeholders, a QPL was created to address core decisional and informational needs of surgical patients. Future testing will evaluate whether this list can be used to improve patient engagement and reduce postoperative regret and conflict about postoperative treatments.
老年患者术后发生并发症的风险更高,但与年轻患者相比,他们询问手术相关问题的可能性更小。
设计一种干预措施,以改善术前决策并管理术后预期。
设计、背景和参与者:成立了患者及家属咨询委员会(PFAC),以帮助确定术前决策需求。PFAC由4名曾作为老年患者或其家庭成员经历过高风险手术的男性和女性组成;该委员会于2014年5月至2015年4月在当地一家图书馆每月召开会议,研究先前定性研究的结果,并将主题与PFAC成员的经验相结合。患者观察包括91次患者与外科医生之间的录音对话以及61次手术前后对患者的访谈。PFAC成员和其他利益相关者评估了118个公开可用的问题,并选择了12个与确定的需求相对应的问题,以生成问题提示列表(QPL)。在威斯康星州麦迪逊和密尔沃基的社区中心进行了3个焦点小组讨论,包括31名来自不同背景的社区成员,以完善QPL。在麦迪逊的一家门诊手术诊所对42名考虑手术的患者进行了临床试点。
生成一份QPL,以满足患者术前的信息需求和决策需求。
通过对定性数据的探索,PFAC指出了3个关键问题。患者及其家属认为手术必须进行,对术后恢复困难感到惊讶,并且缺乏关于围手术期使用预先医疗指示的知识。PFAC确定在术前对话中需要更多信息和决策支持,包括明确治疗选择、设定术后预期和预先护理计划。出现了以下3个问题提示类别:“我应该做手术吗?”“如果一切顺利,我应该期待什么?”以及“如果出了问题会怎样?”最终列表在这些领域内包含11个问题,用英语和西班牙语都易于理解,并且在诊所中患者可以接受。
通过利益相关者的直接参与,创建了一份QPL,以满足手术患者的核心决策和信息需求。未来的测试将评估这份列表是否可用于提高患者参与度,并减少术后遗憾以及关于术后治疗的冲突。