Division of Urogynecology, Department of Obstetrics-Gynecology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM.
Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2019 Feb;220(2):185.e1-185.e10. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2018.10.033. Epub 2018 Oct 26.
The Institute for Healthcare Improvement defines an adverse event as an unintended physical injury resulting from or contributed to by medical care that requires additional monitoring, treatment, or hospitalization or that results in death. The majority of research has focused on adverse events from the provider's perspective.
The objective of this qualitative study was to describe patient perceptions on adverse events following surgery for pelvic floor disorders.
Women representing the following 3 separate surgical populations participated in focus groups: (1) preoperative (women <12 weeks prior to surgery); (2) short-term postoperative (women up to 12 weeks after surgery); and (3) long-term postoperative (women 1-5 years after surgery). Deidentified transcripts of audio recordings were coded and analyzed with NVivo 10 software to identify themes, concepts, and adverse events. Women were asked to rank patient-identified and surgeon-identified adverse events in order of perceived severity.
Eighty-one women participated in 12 focus groups. Group demographics were similar between groups, and all groups shared similar perspectives regarding surgical expectations. Women commonly reported an unclear understanding of their surgery and categorized adverse events such as incontinence, constipation, nocturia, and lack of improvement in sexual function as very severe, ranking these comparably with intensive care unit admissions or other major surgical complications. Women also expressed a sense of personal failure and shame if symptoms recurred.
Women consider functional outcomes such as incontinence, sexual dysfunction, and recurrence of symptoms as severe adverse events and rate them as similar in severity to intensive care unit admissions and death.
美国卫生保健改进研究所将不良事件定义为因医疗护理而导致或促成的意外身体伤害,需要额外的监测、治疗或住院治疗,或导致死亡。大多数研究都集中在从提供者角度看待不良事件。
本定性研究的目的是描述女性在接受盆底功能障碍手术治疗后对不良事件的看法。
代表以下 3 个不同手术人群的女性参加了焦点小组:(1)术前(手术前<12 周);(2)短期术后(手术后 12 周内);(3)长期术后(手术后 1-5 年)。对录音的匿名转录本进行编码和分析,使用 NVivo 10 软件识别主题、概念和不良事件。女性被要求按照感知严重程度对患者识别和外科医生识别的不良事件进行排序。
81 名女性参加了 12 个焦点小组。组间人口统计学特征相似,所有组对手术期望的看法相似。女性普遍报告对手术缺乏清晰的理解,并将尿失禁、便秘、夜尿症和性功能改善不佳等不良事件归类为非常严重,将这些与重症监护病房入院或其他重大手术并发症的严重程度进行了比较。女性如果症状复发,还会感到个人失败和羞耻。
女性将尿失禁、性功能障碍和症状复发等功能结果视为严重的不良事件,并将其严重程度与重症监护病房入院和死亡相提并论。