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Patient recall 6 weeks after surgical consent for midurethral sling using mesh.

Authors :
McFadden BL
Constantine ML
Hammil SL
Tarr ME
Abed HT
Kenton KS
Sung VW
Rogers RG
Source :
International urogynecology journal [Int Urogynecol J] 2013 Dec; Vol. 24 (12), pp. 2099-104. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Jul 02.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Introduction and Hypothesis: We aimed to determine patient recall of specific surgical risks and benefits discussed during consent for midurethral sling (MUS) surgery immediately after consent and at 6 weeks follow-up. Specifically we sought to determine whether or not women recalled specific risks related to the placement of mesh.<br />Methods: Surgeons consented patients for MUS in their usual fashion during audio recorded consent sessions. After consent and again at 6 weeks postoperatively, women completed a checklist of risks, benefits, alternatives, and general procedural items covered during consent. In addition, women completed the Decision Regret Scale for Pelvic Floor Disorders (DRS-PFD). Audio files were used to verify specific risks, benefits, alternatives, and procedural items discussed at consent. Recall of specific risks, benefits, and alternatives were correlated with DRS-PFD scores.<br />Results: Sixty-three women completed checklists immediately post consent and at 6 weeks postoperatively. Six-week recall of benefits, alternatives, and description of the operation did not change. Surgical risk recall as measured by the patient checklist deteriorated from 92 % immediately post consent to 72 % at 6 weeks postoperatively (p < .001). Recall of the risk for mesh erosion declined from 91 to 64 % (p < .001). Recall that mesh was placed during the MUS procedure declined from 98 to 84 % (p = .01). DRS-PFD scores were correlated with poorer surgical risk recall and surgical complications (r = .31, p = .02).<br />Conclusions: Recall of MUS surgery risks deteriorated over time. Specifically, women forgot that mesh was placed or might erode. Further investigations into methods and measures of adequate consent that promote recall of long-term surgical risks are needed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1433-3023
Volume :
24
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International urogynecology journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23818127
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00192-013-2136-5