Lack of recall after sedation for cataract surgery and its effect on the validity of measuring patient satisfaction

Background We evaluated the validity of assessing patient satisfaction with the sedation regimen among patients being discharged 45 min after receiving midazolam. If most patients do not have recall, then the sedation cannot be considered complete at the time of evaluation. Methods In this prospecti...

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Main Authors: Ryan M. Chadha, Franklin Dexter, Sorin J. Brull
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society of Anesthesiologists 2020-08-01
Series:Korean Journal of Anesthesiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ekja.org/upload/pdf/kja-19314.pdf
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spelling doaj-29cd4ec991184fb6a268791ba3a892fa2020-11-25T03:43:53ZengKorean Society of AnesthesiologistsKorean Journal of Anesthesiology2005-64192005-75632020-08-0173431932510.4097/kja.193148585Lack of recall after sedation for cataract surgery and its effect on the validity of measuring patient satisfactionRyan M. Chadha0Franklin Dexter1Sorin J. Brull2 Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL, USA Department of Anesthesia, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL, USABackground We evaluated the validity of assessing patient satisfaction with the sedation regimen among patients being discharged 45 min after receiving midazolam. If most patients do not have recall, then the sedation cannot be considered complete at the time of evaluation. Methods In this prospective cohort study, 20 patients underwent cataract surgery with nurse-administered midazolam and fentanyl. The 11-item Iowa Satisfaction with Anesthesia Scale was administered ≅ 30 min after sedation in the recovery room. Recalled items were evaluated the next morning. Results Eleven patients recalled 0 themes, 4 recalled 1, 4 recalled 2, and 1 recalled 3 themes. Thus, 15/20 patients (75%) recalled 0 or 1 of the 11 themes (P = 0.021 versus half the patients). The 95% one-sided lower confidence limit for 0, 1, or 2 themes was 80% of patients (P < 0.001 versus half). Patients who received less midazolam recalled more themes (Kendall’s τb = 0.43, P = 0.039). Conclusions Evaluating patient satisfaction with sedation shortly after admission to the post-anesthesia care unit is invalid because of a lack of recall; the sedation/amnesia is ongoing. Patient comfort may be assessed, but comfort is not synonymous with satisfaction; ‘satisfaction’ implies presence of recall. Because we studied sedation with low doses of midazolam and fentanyl, the same conclusion reliably would apply to larger doses of anxiolytics administered intraoperatively. The results match previous findings that when patients receive preoperative midazolam prior to meeting the anesthesiologist, even if the patient fully answers questions, they may have negligible recall of having met the anesthesiologist.http://ekja.org/upload/pdf/kja-19314.pdfcataract surgeryiowa satisfaction with anesthesia scalemidazolampatient satisfaction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ryan M. Chadha
Franklin Dexter
Sorin J. Brull
spellingShingle Ryan M. Chadha
Franklin Dexter
Sorin J. Brull
Lack of recall after sedation for cataract surgery and its effect on the validity of measuring patient satisfaction
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology
cataract surgery
iowa satisfaction with anesthesia scale
midazolam
patient satisfaction
author_facet Ryan M. Chadha
Franklin Dexter
Sorin J. Brull
author_sort Ryan M. Chadha
title Lack of recall after sedation for cataract surgery and its effect on the validity of measuring patient satisfaction
title_short Lack of recall after sedation for cataract surgery and its effect on the validity of measuring patient satisfaction
title_full Lack of recall after sedation for cataract surgery and its effect on the validity of measuring patient satisfaction
title_fullStr Lack of recall after sedation for cataract surgery and its effect on the validity of measuring patient satisfaction
title_full_unstemmed Lack of recall after sedation for cataract surgery and its effect on the validity of measuring patient satisfaction
title_sort lack of recall after sedation for cataract surgery and its effect on the validity of measuring patient satisfaction
publisher Korean Society of Anesthesiologists
series Korean Journal of Anesthesiology
issn 2005-6419
2005-7563
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Background We evaluated the validity of assessing patient satisfaction with the sedation regimen among patients being discharged 45 min after receiving midazolam. If most patients do not have recall, then the sedation cannot be considered complete at the time of evaluation. Methods In this prospective cohort study, 20 patients underwent cataract surgery with nurse-administered midazolam and fentanyl. The 11-item Iowa Satisfaction with Anesthesia Scale was administered ≅ 30 min after sedation in the recovery room. Recalled items were evaluated the next morning. Results Eleven patients recalled 0 themes, 4 recalled 1, 4 recalled 2, and 1 recalled 3 themes. Thus, 15/20 patients (75%) recalled 0 or 1 of the 11 themes (P = 0.021 versus half the patients). The 95% one-sided lower confidence limit for 0, 1, or 2 themes was 80% of patients (P < 0.001 versus half). Patients who received less midazolam recalled more themes (Kendall’s τb = 0.43, P = 0.039). Conclusions Evaluating patient satisfaction with sedation shortly after admission to the post-anesthesia care unit is invalid because of a lack of recall; the sedation/amnesia is ongoing. Patient comfort may be assessed, but comfort is not synonymous with satisfaction; ‘satisfaction’ implies presence of recall. Because we studied sedation with low doses of midazolam and fentanyl, the same conclusion reliably would apply to larger doses of anxiolytics administered intraoperatively. The results match previous findings that when patients receive preoperative midazolam prior to meeting the anesthesiologist, even if the patient fully answers questions, they may have negligible recall of having met the anesthesiologist.
topic cataract surgery
iowa satisfaction with anesthesia scale
midazolam
patient satisfaction
url http://ekja.org/upload/pdf/kja-19314.pdf
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