| Literature DB >> 28904893 |
Matt Ziegelmann1, Tobias S Köhler1, George C Bailey1, Tanner Miest1, Manaf Alom1, Landon Trost1.
Abstract
The objectives of patient selection and counseling are ultimately to enhance successful outcomes. However, the definition for success is often narrowly defined in published literature (ability to complete surgery, complications, satisfaction) and fails to account for patient desires and expectations, temporal changes, natural history of underlying diseases, or independent validation. Factors associated with satisfaction and dissatisfaction are often surgery-specific, although correlation with pre-operative expectations, revisions, and complications are common with most procedures. The process of appropriate patient selection is determined by the integration of patient and surgeon factors, including psychological capacity to handle unsatisfactory results, baseline expectations, complexity of case, and surgeon volume and experience. Using this model, a high-risk scenario includes one in which a low-volume surgeon performs a complex case in a patient with limited psychological capacity and high expectations. In contrast, a high-volume surgeon performing a routine case in a male with low expectations and abundant psychiatric reserve is more likely to achieve a successful outcome. To further help identify patients who are at high risk for dissatisfaction, a previously published mnemonic is recommended: CURSED Patient (compulsive/obsessive, unrealistic, revision, surgeon shopping, entitled, denial, and psychiatric). Appropriate patient counseling includes setting appropriate expectations, reviewing the potential and anticipated risks of surgery, post-operative instruction to limit complications, and long-term follow-up. As thorough counseling is often a time-consuming endeavor, busy practices may elect to utilize various resources including educational materials, advanced practice providers, or group visits, among others. The consequences for poor patient selection and counseling may range from poor surgical outcomes and patient dissatisfaction to lawsuits, loss of credibility, or even significant patient or personal harm.Entities:
Keywords: Patient selection; education; patient satisfaction; surgeon satisfaction
Year: 2017 PMID: 28904893 PMCID: PMC5583047 DOI: 10.21037/tau.2017.07.19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
Patient character traits associated with operative satisfaction/dissatisfaction—CURSED patient (31)
| Factor | Specific traits and examples |
|---|---|
| Compulsive/obsessive | Obsess about minor, age-associated changes in anatomy |
| “Penocentric” | |
| Pathologically observant | |
| Overly detail oriented | |
| Perfectionist | |
| Inflexible | |
| Unrealistic | Excessively optimistic |
| Discount possibility of complications | |
| May pre-define requests on surgical approach, techniques, or devices | |
| Request repeated assurances of successful outcomes | |
| May be seeking psychosocial benefits | |
| Revision | Progressive decreases in satisfaction with each revision procedure |
| Surgeon shopping | Details history of what other surgeons have “done to them” |
| Fails to take responsibility for decisions | |
| Seeking a desired set of outcomes | |
| Flatters surgeon; quick to criticize post-operatively | |
| Often have experience in medical field | |
| Entitled | Disrespectful of office staff |
| Patronizing | |
| Demand specialized treatment/attention | |
| Frequent calls/visits | |
| Unreasonable scheduling requests | |
| Disregard protocols and policies | |
| Annoyed and hurried | |
| Personal hypotheses as to their condition | |
| Dominate conversations | |
| Poorly compliant | |
| Displace culpability | |
| Denial | Exaggerated memories of prior sexual characteristics |
| Psychiatric | Mood disorders—acceptable surgical candidates with treatment |
| Personality disorders—poor surgical candidates | |
| “Penile” dysmorphic disorder |
Figure 1Graphical modeling of predictors for overall surgical success and risk of complications. Estimates of patient psychological capacity and expectations are combined with surgeon experience/volume and case complexity to determine an overall likelihood for success.
Figure 2Algorithmic representation of the process of mutual decision-making.