Which Clinical Anesthesia Outcomes Are Important to Avoid? The Perspective of Patients
- 1 September 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Anesthesia & Analgesia
- Vol. 89 (3) , 652
- https://doi.org/10.1213/00000539-199909000-00022
Abstract
Rvey. Patients were asked to rank (order) 10 possible postoperative outcomes from their most undesirable to their least undesirable outcome. Each outcome was described in simple language. Patients were also asked to distribute $100 among the 10 outcomes, proportionally more money being allocated to the more undesirable outcomes. The dollar allocations were used to determine the relative value of each outcome. Rankings and relative value scores correlated closely (r2 = 0.69). Patients rated from most undesirable to least undesirable (in order): vomiting, gagging on the tracheal tube, incisional pain, nausea, recall without pain, residual weakness, shivering, sore throat, and somnolence (F-test < 0.01). Implications Although there is variability in how patients rated postoperative outcomes, avoiding nausea/vomiting, incisional pain, and gagging on the endotracheal tube was a high priority for most patients. Whether clinicians can improve the quality of anesthesia by designing anesthesia regimens that most closely meet each individual patient’s preferences for clinical outcomes deserves further study....This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
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