Severity of Postoperative Complications From the Perspective of the Patient

Background: Although provider-derived surgical complication severity grading systems exist, little is known about the patient perspective. Objective: To assess patient-rated complication severity and determine concordance with existing grading systems. Methods: A survey asked general surgery patient...

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Main Authors: Victoria R Rendell MD, Alexander B Siy BS, Linda M Cherney Stafford MPH, Ryan K Schmocker MD, Glen E Leverson PhD, Emily R Winslow MD, MS, FACS
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Patient Experience
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373519893199
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spelling doaj-bf176bb313ca4549a2c93b20303a69f32021-01-05T01:06:09ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Patient Experience2374-37352374-37432020-12-01710.1177/2374373519893199Severity of Postoperative Complications From the Perspective of the PatientVictoria R Rendell MD0Alexander B Siy BS1Linda M Cherney Stafford MPH2Ryan K Schmocker MD3Glen E Leverson PhD4Emily R Winslow MD, MS, FACS5 Department of Surgery, , Madison, WI, USA. Schmocker is now with the Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. Winslow is now with the Medstar Georgetown Transplant Institute, Washington, DC, USA Department of Surgery, , Madison, WI, USA. Schmocker is now with the Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. Winslow is now with the Medstar Georgetown Transplant Institute, Washington, DC, USA Department of Surgery, , Madison, WI, USA. Schmocker is now with the Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. Winslow is now with the Medstar Georgetown Transplant Institute, Washington, DC, USA Department of Surgery, , Madison, WI, USA. Schmocker is now with the Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. Winslow is now with the Medstar Georgetown Transplant Institute, Washington, DC, USA Department of Surgery, , Madison, WI, USA. Schmocker is now with the Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. Winslow is now with the Medstar Georgetown Transplant Institute, Washington, DC, USA Department of Surgery, , Madison, WI, USA. Schmocker is now with the Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. Winslow is now with the Medstar Georgetown Transplant Institute, Washington, DC, USABackground: Although provider-derived surgical complication severity grading systems exist, little is known about the patient perspective. Objective: To assess patient-rated complication severity and determine concordance with existing grading systems. Methods: A survey asked general surgery patients to rate the severity of 21 hypothetical postoperative events representing grades 1 to 5 complications from the Accordion Severity Grading System. Concordance with the Accordion scale was examined. Separately, descriptive ratings of 18 brief postoperative events were ranked. Results: One hundred sixty-eight patients returned a mailed survey following their discharge from a general surgery service. Patients rated grade 4 complications highest. Grade 1 complications were rated similarly to grade 5 and higher than grades 2 and 3 ( P ≤ .01). Patients rated one event not considered an Accordion scale complication higher than all but grade 4 complications ( P < .001). The brief events also did not follow the Accordion scale, other than the grade 6 complication ranking highest. Conclusion: Patient-rated complication severity is discordant with provider-derived grading systems, suggesting the need to explore important differences between patient and provider perspectives.https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373519893199
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Victoria R Rendell MD
Alexander B Siy BS
Linda M Cherney Stafford MPH
Ryan K Schmocker MD
Glen E Leverson PhD
Emily R Winslow MD, MS, FACS
spellingShingle Victoria R Rendell MD
Alexander B Siy BS
Linda M Cherney Stafford MPH
Ryan K Schmocker MD
Glen E Leverson PhD
Emily R Winslow MD, MS, FACS
Severity of Postoperative Complications From the Perspective of the Patient
Journal of Patient Experience
author_facet Victoria R Rendell MD
Alexander B Siy BS
Linda M Cherney Stafford MPH
Ryan K Schmocker MD
Glen E Leverson PhD
Emily R Winslow MD, MS, FACS
author_sort Victoria R Rendell MD
title Severity of Postoperative Complications From the Perspective of the Patient
title_short Severity of Postoperative Complications From the Perspective of the Patient
title_full Severity of Postoperative Complications From the Perspective of the Patient
title_fullStr Severity of Postoperative Complications From the Perspective of the Patient
title_full_unstemmed Severity of Postoperative Complications From the Perspective of the Patient
title_sort severity of postoperative complications from the perspective of the patient
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Patient Experience
issn 2374-3735
2374-3743
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Background: Although provider-derived surgical complication severity grading systems exist, little is known about the patient perspective. Objective: To assess patient-rated complication severity and determine concordance with existing grading systems. Methods: A survey asked general surgery patients to rate the severity of 21 hypothetical postoperative events representing grades 1 to 5 complications from the Accordion Severity Grading System. Concordance with the Accordion scale was examined. Separately, descriptive ratings of 18 brief postoperative events were ranked. Results: One hundred sixty-eight patients returned a mailed survey following their discharge from a general surgery service. Patients rated grade 4 complications highest. Grade 1 complications were rated similarly to grade 5 and higher than grades 2 and 3 ( P ≤ .01). Patients rated one event not considered an Accordion scale complication higher than all but grade 4 complications ( P < .001). The brief events also did not follow the Accordion scale, other than the grade 6 complication ranking highest. Conclusion: Patient-rated complication severity is discordant with provider-derived grading systems, suggesting the need to explore important differences between patient and provider perspectives.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373519893199
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