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C. Norton
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P2.06 - Poster Session with Presenters Present (ID 467)
- Event: WCLC 2016
- Type: Poster Presenters Present
- Track: Scientific Co-Operation/Research Groups (Clinical Trials in Progress should be submitted in this category)
- Presentations: 2
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 12/06/2016, 14:30 - 15:45, Hall B (Poster Area)
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P2.06-040 - WINNERS Study: Does a Formal Interactive Patient Education Program Positively Impact Patient Outcomes and Satisfaction after Thoracic Surgery (ID 6106)
14:30 - 14:30 | Author(s): C. Norton
- Abstract
Background:
Post-operative complications in the thoracic surgery patient population can be costly to healthcare systems and devastating to patients and their families. The most common complications are respiratory, cardiac and gastrointestinal in nature. It is estimated that these complications occur at a rate of 3-5%. In an effort to improve patient outcomes, a nurse led multidisciplinary team developed and implemented the WINNERS Study (Walking with INtegrated Nursing, Exercise, Respiratory/Rehab Services), designed to determine if a formal pre-operative/perioperative interactive patient education program would positively impact patient outcomes and improve satisfaction following thoracic surgery.
Methods:
Figure 1 All general thoracic surgery patients undergo informed consent and are randomized to current standard of care verbal pre-operative teaching vs pre-operative/perioperative interactive patient education program. The multidisciplinary team developed formal patient educational materials, written and audiovisual, used to educate and prepare patients for what they should expect post-operatively with respect to the importance of secretion management, ambulation, general aspects of what to expect after surgery and the importance of their active participation in their post-operative recovery. The study design is outlined in Figure 1. The endpoints include length of stay, reintubation rates, pneumonia incidence, quality of life measurements, physical function measurements (PFT / 6min walk / total steps). Patient satisfaction is measures with the Quality of Life Instrument, SF-36 at pre-determined time-points.
Results:
Patients are currently actively enrolling into the study without any recruitment issues or adverse events.The preliminary analysis demonstrates a favorable impact on patient outcomes and improved patient satisfaction.
Conclusion:
This study is ongoing.
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P2.06-041 - TeleNursing: A Thoracic Surgery Nursing Initiative Aimed at Decreasing Hospital Readmissions and Increasing Patient Satisfaction (ID 6204)
14:30 - 14:30 | Author(s): C. Norton
- Abstract
Background:
In the USA there is a national initiative in healthcare to decrease hospital readmissions, decrease the cost of care while patients are hospitalized and to increase patient. A recent study evaluating mortality rates in the lung cancer resection patients reported a 30-day readmission was associated with a 6-fold increase in the 90-day mortality of this patient population (14.4% vs 2.5%). This report not only forces thoracic surgery teams to extend their operative mortality focus and reporting beyond the traditional 30-day time period but it also emphasizes the critical value and positive impact continued post-operative care for the first three months after discharge can have on patient outcomes. The expert care delivered by thoracic surgery nurses plays a critical role in decreasing post-operative complications and ensuring patients are safely discharged from the hospital. The valuable impact thoracic surgery nurses have on preventing hospital readmissions and improving patient satisfaction is the intended focus of this clinical trial. The positive impact telehealth interventions have on multiple different disease processes supports investigation of this care modality for the thoracic surgery patient population. We have designed a clinical trial focused on implementing a TeleNursing program with the specific aims of preventing hospital readmissions and improving patient satisfaction.
Methods:
Our thoracic surgery practice currently has a “day-after-discharge” follow-up phone call program that is directed by the thoracic surgery nurses in the practice. Pertinent clinical details of each patient’s post-operative course are relayed to the thoracic surgery nurses. The nurses call patients 2-3 days after discharge and asked questions related to medications, pain management, sign or symptoms of infection, activity level and expectations, sleep, appetite and general understanding of all discharge instructions. This interaction is documented in the electronic medical record. This program has been expanded to compare the efficacy of the phone calls vs scheduled video-calls between nurses and patients. Patients are randomized to standard of care day after discharge phone calls vs the TeleNursing follow-up video-call; discharge day 2, 1-month, 2-month and 3-month. All patients complete a patient satisfaction questionnaire at predetermined time points. The primary objective is to decrease hospital readmission rates and the secondary objective is to improve patient satisfaction.
Results:
Although the results of this clinical trial are pending, interim analysis indicates that patients are willing to participate in this program and are pleased with the nurse-patient interaction beyond their hospital stay.
Conclusion:
This clinical investigation is ongoing