TY - JOUR
T1 - Patient preference for the pre-anesthesia evaluation
T2 - Telephone versus in-office assessment
AU - Lozada, Manuel James
AU - Nguyen, John T.C.
AU - Abouleish, Amr
AU - Prough, Donald
AU - Przkora, Rene
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2016/6/1
Y1 - 2016/6/1
N2 - Study objective Pre-anesthesia evaluation (PAE) is designed to reduce patient and family anxiety, identify pre-existing health issues, avoid surgical delays, minimize costs, and tailor an anesthetic plan. If PAE requires a clinic visit, patients must take time off work and may incur travel and childcare costs. A telephone-based Preoperative Assessment Clinic can minimize patient inconvenience, while maintaining high-quality patient care and improving efficiency. We assessed patient satisfaction with a telephone PAE and determined whether patients preferred a telephone PAE or a conventional clinic visit. Design Prospective, institutional review board-approved study. Setting University hospital. Patients We conducted an IRB-approved telephone survey of 75 adult, post-operative patients. Interventions Telephone survey. Measurements Patients were asked about their preference for a telephone PAE over an in-person evaluation. Survey questions included assessment of patient satisfaction with their anesthesia evaluation, operation, and anesthetic delivered. Delays and day of surgery cancellations were reviewed. Main results The majority (97%) of patients stated they preferred a telephone PAE. Patient satisfaction was unaffected by driving distance (30 ± 54 mi), ASA physical status or duration of surgery (169 ± 159 min). Even patients who were not satisfied with their anesthetic (N = 5) still preferred the telephone-based PAE. No increase in surgical delays or cancellation was noted. Conclusion The majority of patients in this survey preferred a telephone PAE. Given the large catchment area of our hospital of nine counties, telephone-based interviews add to patient convenience and likely increase compliance with the PAE. Even patients who live in close proximity to our hospital (< 5 mi) preferred a telephone assessment. A telephone-based PAE provides high patient satisfaction over a traditional office visit while increasing patient convenience. Larger studies are necessary to ensure that telephone PAEs compare well with in-person examinations.
AB - Study objective Pre-anesthesia evaluation (PAE) is designed to reduce patient and family anxiety, identify pre-existing health issues, avoid surgical delays, minimize costs, and tailor an anesthetic plan. If PAE requires a clinic visit, patients must take time off work and may incur travel and childcare costs. A telephone-based Preoperative Assessment Clinic can minimize patient inconvenience, while maintaining high-quality patient care and improving efficiency. We assessed patient satisfaction with a telephone PAE and determined whether patients preferred a telephone PAE or a conventional clinic visit. Design Prospective, institutional review board-approved study. Setting University hospital. Patients We conducted an IRB-approved telephone survey of 75 adult, post-operative patients. Interventions Telephone survey. Measurements Patients were asked about their preference for a telephone PAE over an in-person evaluation. Survey questions included assessment of patient satisfaction with their anesthesia evaluation, operation, and anesthetic delivered. Delays and day of surgery cancellations were reviewed. Main results The majority (97%) of patients stated they preferred a telephone PAE. Patient satisfaction was unaffected by driving distance (30 ± 54 mi), ASA physical status or duration of surgery (169 ± 159 min). Even patients who were not satisfied with their anesthetic (N = 5) still preferred the telephone-based PAE. No increase in surgical delays or cancellation was noted. Conclusion The majority of patients in this survey preferred a telephone PAE. Given the large catchment area of our hospital of nine counties, telephone-based interviews add to patient convenience and likely increase compliance with the PAE. Even patients who live in close proximity to our hospital (< 5 mi) preferred a telephone assessment. A telephone-based PAE provides high patient satisfaction over a traditional office visit while increasing patient convenience. Larger studies are necessary to ensure that telephone PAEs compare well with in-person examinations.
KW - Patient satisfaction
KW - Pre-anesthesia evaluation
KW - Surgery cancellation
KW - Survey
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jclinane.2015.12.040
DO - 10.1016/j.jclinane.2015.12.040
M3 - Article
C2 - 27185698
AN - SCOPUS:84963541493
SN - 0952-8180
VL - 31
SP - 145
EP - 148
JO - Journal of Clinical Anesthesia
JF - Journal of Clinical Anesthesia
ER -