大流行相关手术积压恢复的患者、家属和专业建议:一项定性研究。

CMAJ open Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.9778/cmajo.20220109
Andrea N Simpson, David Gomez, Nancy N Baxter, Elizabeth Miazga, David Urbach, Jessica Ramlakhan, Anne M Sorvari, Alawia Sherif, Anna R Gagliardi
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摘要

背景:与COVID-19大流行相关的手术关闭导致非紧急手术等待时间延长。我们旨在通过与主要利益攸关方的焦点小组讨论,了解在当前COVID-19大流行背景下的信息需求,并就外科手术积压的管理提出建议。方法:我们对2021年9月29日至11月30日在安大略省举行的焦点小组进行了定性研究,其中包括在大流行期间接受手术或等待手术的患者及其家人,以及具有监督手术服务交付经验或影响力的医疗保健领导者。我们进行了虚拟的焦点小组;针对患者和家属的焦点小组与医疗保健负责人分开进行,以确保参与者可以自由地讲述他们的经历。我们的目标是引出关于手术积压的沟通影响的信息,如何改进这种沟通,并产生和优先考虑解决积压的建议。数据被映射到两个互补框架中,这两个框架对减少等待时间的方法和改善卫生保健服务的战略进行了分类。结果:共有11名患者及家属、20名医疗保健负责人(7名护理外科主任、10名外科医生、3名行政人员)参加了7个焦点小组(2名患者及家属、5名医疗保健负责人)。参与者报告收到了关于手术积压的相互矛盾的信息。关于积压的沟通建议包括来自单一来源的统一消息,以明确的语言教育公众。与会者对手术恢复的优先建议如下:通过关注系统效率和维持或增加卫生保健人员来增加供应;将以患者为中心的结果纳入分诊定义;完善绩效管理策略,以理解和衡量外科医生和中心之间的不平等,并考虑资金激励对“非优先”手术的影响。解释:患者及其家属和医疗保健负责人对手术积压缺乏沟通,并建议这些信息应来自单一来源;管理手术积压的关键建议包括注重系统效率,将以患者为中心的结果纳入分诊定义,以及改进等待时间的测量以监测卫生系统的绩效。在这项研究中产生的建议,可用于解决手术积压恢复在加拿大设置。
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Patient, family and professional suggestions for pandemic-related surgical backlog recovery: a qualitative study.
Background: Surgical shutdowns related to the COVID-19 pandemic have resulted in prolonged wait times for nonemergency surgery. We aimed to understand informational needs and generate suggestions on management of the surgical backlog in the context of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic through focus groups with key stakeholders. Methods: We performed a qualitative study with focus groups held between Sept. 29 and Nov. 30, 2021, in Ontario, with patients who underwent or were awaiting surgery during the pandemic and their family members, and health care leaders with experience or influence overseeing the delivery of surgical services. We conducted the focus groups virtually; focus groups for patients and family members were conducted separately from health care leaders to ensure participants could speak freely about their experiences. Our goal was to elicit information on the impact of communication about the surgical backlog, how this communication may be improved, and to generate and prioritize suggestions to address the backlog. Data were mapped onto 2 complementary frameworks that categorized approaches to reduction in wait times and strategies to improve health care delivery. Results: A total of 11 patients and family members and 20 health care leaders (7 nursing surgical directors, 10 surgeons and 3 administrators) participated in 7 focus groups (2 patient and family, and 5 health care leader). Participants reported receiving conflicting information about the surgical backlog. Suggestions for communication about the backlog included unified messaging from a single source with clear language to educate the public. Participants prioritized the following suggestions for surgical recovery: increase supply through focusing on system efficiencies and maintaining or increasing health care personnel; incorporate patient-centred outcomes into triage definitions; and refine strategies for performance management to understand and measure inequities between surgeons and centres, and consider the impact of funding incentives on “nonpriority” procedures. Interpretation: Patients and their families and health care leaders experienced a lack of communication about the surgical backlog and suggested this information should come from a single source; key suggestions to manage the surgical backlog included a focus on system efficiencies, incorporation of patient-centred outcomes into triage definitions, and improving the measurement of wait times to monitor health system performance. The suggestions generated in this study that may be used to address surgical backlog recovery in the Canadian setting.
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