Loewenstein Scott N, Pittelkow Eric, Kukushliev Vasil V, Hadad Ivan, Adkinson Joshua
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA.
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, USA.
Cureus. 2022 Feb 14;14(2):e22202. doi: 10.7759/cureus.22202. eCollection 2022 Feb.
Background In this study, we sought to determine if postoperative physician phone calls following hand and wrist fracture surgery improve patient outcomes, satisfaction, and treatment adherence. Methodology We prospectively enrolled 24 consecutive adult patients who underwent outpatient surgery for isolated hand and wrist fractures at a single, metropolitan, safety-net hospital over one year to receive an additional physician phone call starting on postoperative day one. We measured preoperative and postoperative Brief Michigan Hand Questionnaire (bMHQ) composite score, overall satisfaction on a five-point Likert scale, compliance with treatment recommendations, presence of complications, discharge instructions reading level, and clarity of discharge and follow-up instructions. The surgical team was blinded to the treatment arm. Results The bMHQ score improved 26% after surgery; however, there was no difference in absolute score change between groups (12.2 vs. 6.5, p = 0.69). Most patients were satisfied throughout all stages of care, but postoperative satisfaction did not differ between groups (1.4 vs. 2.5, p = 0.21). There was a stronger correlation between patient hand function and satisfaction starting one month after surgery (R = 0.502, p = 0.002) than preoperatively (R = 0.252, p = 0.029). Immediately following surgery, most patients stated that discharge instructions were clear, and the average readability was below the average patient education level. Despite this, 13% removed their splint or Kirschner wires, 67% did not follow up within a week of recommendation, 62% did not complete postoperative treatment, and 33% had complications. Conclusions Postoperative phone calls by physicians did not improve compliance with recommendations, patient-rated outcome measures, or clinical outcomes among our hand and wrist fracture patient population.
背景 在本研究中,我们试图确定手部和腕部骨折手术后医生的电话随访是否能改善患者的治疗效果、满意度和治疗依从性。方法 我们前瞻性地纳入了连续24例成年患者,这些患者在一家大城市的安全网医院接受了为期一年的门诊孤立性手部和腕部骨折手术,并从术后第一天开始额外接受医生的电话随访。我们测量了术前和术后的密歇根手部简易问卷(bMHQ)综合评分、五分制李克特量表的总体满意度、对治疗建议的依从性、并发症的发生情况、出院指导的阅读水平以及出院和随访指导的清晰度。手术团队对治疗组情况不知情。结果 术后bMHQ评分提高了26%;然而,两组之间的绝对评分变化没有差异(12.2对6.5,p = 0.69)。大多数患者在护理的各个阶段都感到满意,但两组术后满意度没有差异(1.4对2.5,p = 0.21)。术后一个月开始,患者手部功能与满意度之间的相关性(R = 0.502,p = 0.002)比术前(R = 0.252,p = 0.029)更强。手术后立即进行调查,大多数患者表示出院指导清晰,平均可读性低于患者平均教育水平。尽管如此,13%的患者拆除了夹板或克氏针,67%的患者未按建议在一周内进行随访,62%的患者未完成术后治疗,33%的患者出现了并发症。结论 在我们的手部和腕部骨折患者群体中,医生的术后电话随访并未提高对建议的依从性、患者自评的疗效指标或临床结局。