Literature DB >> 32716545

Patients' Perceptions After Robot-Assisted Surgery: An Integrative Review.

Rita Moloney, Brid O'Brien, J Calvin Coffey, Alice Coffey, Fiona Murphy.   

Abstract

Surgical techniques have greatly changed and advanced with the advent of robot-assisted surgery (RAS). Patient outcome measures for RAS generally focus on patient morbidity and mortality, surgical complications, and hospital length of stay; there is limited research on patients' perceptions of RAS. Researchers conducted an integrative literature review of published research on patient experience and satisfaction after undergoing RAS. They searched nine databases and screened 1,263 articles for eligibility, six of which were critically appraised and synthesized into two main themes: patient satisfaction with RAS and the effect of information sharing on patient satisfaction. There was a dearth of qualitative studies exploring patients' perceptions after RAS and it was difficult to determine whether patient satisfaction was specifically related to the procedure modality (ie, robotic) or was influenced by other factors (eg, clinical outcomes). Clear differences between patient experience and satisfaction after undergoing RAS versus nonrobotic surgery are not apparent. © AORN, Inc, 2020.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cancer recurrence; patient experience; patient satisfaction; robot-assisted surgery (RAS)

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32716545     DOI: 10.1002/aorn.13104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AORN J        ISSN: 0001-2092            Impact factor:   0.676


  1 in total

1.  Does adoption of new technology increase surgical volume? The robotic inguinal hernia repair model.

Authors:  Tara M Barry; Haroon Janjua; Christopher DuCoin; Emanuel Eguia; Paul C Kuo
Journal:  J Robot Surg       Date:  2021-09-13
  1 in total

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