Oswald Nicola, Hardman John, Kerr Amy, Bishay Ehab, Steyn Richard, Rajesh Pala, Kalkat Maninder, Naidu Babu
Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, University of Birmingham Laboratories, University of Birmingham, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK.
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, Bordesley Green East, Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, Birmingham, B9 5SS, UK.
J Cardiothorac Surg. 2018 Feb 1;13(1):18. doi: 10.1186/s13019-018-0707-8.
Receiving information about their disease and treatment is very important to patients with cancer. There is an association between feeling appropriately informed and better quality of life. This audit aimed to estimate patient satisfaction with perioperative information in those undergoing surgery for lung cancer and any change in satisfaction over time.
A questionnaire (EORTC-Info-25) was administered prospectively to patients preoperatively and up to six months postoperatively. The preoperative questionnaire was completed by 292 patients and 88 free text comments were completed. Intrapersonal responses were compared over time.
Patients were highly satisfied with information prior to surgery. The overall helpfulness of information did not change over time but satisfaction with the amount of information decreased. Patients who received more information about 'the disease' and 'things you can do to help yourself get well' were less likely to report a drop in satisfaction (Odds Ratio 0.858, 95% Confidence interval 0.765 to 0.961, p = 0.008 and OR 0.102, 95% CI 0.018 to 0.590, p = 0.011 respectively). Free text responses revealed patients most frequently wanted more information on the disease, aftercare and self-care. Suffering complications from surgery was not associated with a change in satisfaction with information postoperatively.
Patients want to know more about their diagnosis, but also how to recover and cope with issues once they have gone home after surgery. Postoperative satisfaction with information may improve if patients are given more information on these topics.
对于癌症患者来说,了解自身疾病及治疗信息非常重要。充分了解病情与更好的生活质量之间存在关联。本次审计旨在评估肺癌手术患者对围手术期信息的满意度以及满意度随时间的变化情况。
前瞻性地对患者术前及术后长达六个月的时间内发放问卷(欧洲癌症研究与治疗组织信息问卷 - 25)。292例患者完成了术前问卷,88例填写了自由文本评论。对不同时间的个人回答进行比较。
患者对术前信息高度满意。信息的总体有用性随时间未发生变化,但对信息量的满意度下降。收到更多关于“疾病”和“有助于康复的自我行为”信息的患者报告满意度下降的可能性较小(优势比分别为0.858,95%置信区间0.765至0.961,p = 0.008;以及优势比0.102,95%置信区间0.018至0.590,p = 0.011)。自由文本回答显示患者最常希望获得更多关于疾病、术后护理和自我护理的信息。手术出现并发症与术后信息满意度的变化无关。
患者不仅想了解更多关于自身诊断的信息,还想知道术后回家后如何康复及应对相关问题。如果患者能获得更多关于这些主题的信息,术后对信息的满意度可能会提高。