JOURNAL ARTICLE

Telephone Follow-Up following Office Anorectal Surgery

Rebecca FallaizeChristine Tinline-PurvisAnthony R. DixonAnne-Marie Pullyblank

Year: 2008 Journal:   Annals of The Royal College of Surgeons of England Vol: 90 (6)Pages: 464-466   Publisher: Royal College of Surgeons of England

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Patients with minor anorectal conditions are frequently reviewed at an 8-week out-patient appointment (OPA). This study was designed to assess whether telephone follow-up could reduce OPA numbers whilst maintaining patient satisfaction. PATIENTS AND METHODS Over an 11-month period, 46 patients (23 male) underwent banding of haemorrhoids and 14 were prescribed medical treatment for fissure-in-ano (3 male). All were telephoned at 6 weeks and were offered an 8-week OPA if they had continuing problems. Patients were telephoned at a later date by a member of the hospital's patient panel to assess satisfaction. RESULTS Overall, 88% were contacted at 6 weeks, 60% at the first attempt; 40% required two or more attempts. Of those who underwent banding, 68% were asymptomatic, 17% requested an OPA for re-banding and 15% requested an OPA for a different problem. Of fissure patients, 25% were cured; the remainder were prescribed either second-line medical treatment (8%), anorectal physiology (42%) or surgery (25%). All avoided an OPA. Of a potential 60 OPAs, 47 were saved by telephone follow-up. None of 7 non-contactable patients accepted a written offer of an OPA. Overall, 89% of patients were contacted by the patient panel; of these patients, 93% reported a high level of satisfaction. CONCLUSIONS Telephone follow-up can reduce the number of OPAs following out-patient treatment of minor anorectal conditions whilst maintaining a high level of patient satisfaction. However, it requires considerable consultant time. This process could be developed into either a nurse-led service with booked telephone appointments or a patient-led service to a dedicated hotline.

Keywords:
Medicine Patient satisfaction Asymptomatic Telephone interview Telephone call Surgery Telephone survey Pediatrics

Metrics

16
Cited By
0.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
7
Refs
0.16
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Anorectal Disease Treatments and Outcomes
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Surgery
Clinical practice guidelines implementation
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Pelvic floor disorders treatments
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Rheumatology

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