Author:
Middleton Sandy,Appleberg Michael,Girgis Seham,Ward Jeanette E
Abstract
Purpose: To determine patients? knowledge
before admission about how many days they were
likely to be hospitalised and, after discharge, to
determine patients? perceptions of their ?readiness?
to leave hospital following carotid endarterectomy.
Usefulness of discharge communications
to patients? GPs also was ascertained.
Methods: Pre- and post-operative self-administered
questionnaires to 133 patients and a followup
telephone survey of GPs providing primary
care to 118 of these patients.
Results: Pre-operatively, the majority (84.2%) of
patients recalled being told how many days they
were likely to be hospitalised. Univariate analysis
did not demonstrate any factors predicting positive
recall. The majority (87.0%) of patients perceived
themselves ?ready to go home? at discharge.
Twenty-eight GPs (23.7%) had received both a
discharge summary from the hospital and a personalised
letter from the patient?s surgeon. GP?s
rated the surgeons? letters as significantly more
useful than discharge summaries (P = 0.01).
Conclusions: Although hospitals are required by
NSW Health?s Effective Discharge Policy to inform
patients about their likely length of stay in hospital,
not all patients recalled whether they were so
informed pre-operatively. Barriers impeding realisation of the NSW Health policy remain.
Cited by
7 articles.
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