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The role of demystifying anaesthesia in allaying anxiety and improving post-operative patient satisfaction in a tertiary care centre: A randomised control trial
Author(s) -
Anna Mathew,
Preethy Koshy,
Shamjitha Mariyam,
Shaloo Ipe,
Ponnadurai Ramasami
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
indian journal of clinical anaesthesia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2394-4781
pISSN - 2394-4994
DOI - 10.18231/j.ijca.2020.049
Subject(s) - anxiety , medicine , visual analogue scale , randomized controlled trial , anesthesia , patient satisfaction , intervention (counseling) , abdominal surgery , physical therapy , surgery , nursing , psychiatry
Background: Preoperative anxiety and stress are inevitable in patients awaiting surgery. However it isknown that larger doses of anaesthetics, higher peri- and post-operative requirement of analgesia and longerhospital stay follow higher levels of anxiety. Studies have shown that pre-operative education reducesanxiety symptoms. This studywas undertaken to answer the question: “Does a structured educationalintervention to demystify anaesthesia reduce fear and anxiety prior to surgery?”Objectives: To assess the role of patient education in reducing pre-operative anxiety and fear and improvingsatisfaction in patients undergoing surgery using the Anesthesia- and Surgery-dependent PreoperativeAnxiety Scale (ASPA)and the Visual Analog Scale for fear and the Short Assessment of Patient Satisfaction(SAPS) in patients who have received the structured educational intervention and those who have not.Materials and Methods: This is a parallel group, single blinded, randomised control trial in 56 consentingpatients awaiting abdominal surgery under general anesthesia. The participants were randomized to theinterventional and comparator groups and ASPA and VAS were administered. Participants in Group Awere given the structured educational intervention to demystify anesthesia. The ASPA and VAS Scaleswere again administered by a blinded assessor to all participants. The student investigator administeredSAPS on the third post-operative day or prior to discharge, whichever was earlier.Result: There was significant reduction in median scores before and after intervention for anxiety(ASPA=2) and fear (VAS=20) in intervention group compared to the comparator group. (p value=The median scores for patient satisfaction as measured by SAPS was also higher in the intervention groupcompared to the comparator group.(p value=0.042).Conclusion: There was a significant reduction of pre-operative fear and anxiety in the intervention group,while the patient satisfaction was al

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