1. Graphic narrative based informed consent for bronchoscopy improves satisfaction in patients after lung-transplantation: A randomized controlled trial
- Author
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Nora Drick, Benjamin Seeliger, Christina Valtin, Mark Greer, Moritz Z. Kayser, Jan Fuge, and Jens Gottlieb
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Personal Satisfaction ,law.invention ,Patient satisfaction ,Randomized controlled trial ,Bronchoscopy ,Informed consent ,law ,Clinical endpoint ,medicine ,Lung transplantation ,Humans ,Lung ,Informed Consent ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Patient Satisfaction ,Physical therapy ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,business ,State-Trait Anxiety Inventory ,Lung Transplantation - Abstract
Objective This study investigated the effects of supplementing standard informed consent (IC) with a graphic narrative on patient satisfaction, periprocedural anxiety and experience. Methods Patients due to undergo first conscious surveillance bronchoscopy following lung transplantation were randomized to receive IC with (intervention group) or without (control group) a graphic narrative illustrating the procedure. The primary endpoint was overall patient satisfaction with the IC. Key secondary endpoints were change in state anxiety level, as measured by State Trait Anxiety Inventory, and a questionnaire assessing satisfaction with IC and adverse experience during bronchoscopy (judged by patient and examiners). Results Sixty patients were randomized, and 59 patients were included in the analysis (30 intervention-group; 29 control-group). Overall patient satisfaction was higher in the intervention group 9.5 (25Q–75Q: 8.6–9.8) vs. 8.6 (25Q–75Q: 8.1–9.2), p = 0.028). Change in state anxiety level (before vs after informed consent) was similar between the groups. There were no significant differences in adverse experience during bronchoscopy. Conclusion Addition of a graphic narrative illustrating bronchoscopy improved patient satisfaction with IC but did not influence anxiety before and adverse experience during the procedure. Practice implications Supplementing the IC process with a procedure-specific graphic narrative may be a simple tool to improve patient satisfaction.
- Published
- 2020