| Literature DB >> 35650598 |
Rebecca Wang1, Christopher Yao2,3, Stanley H Hung4, Logan Meyers4, Jason M Sutherland2,5, Ahmer Karimuddin6, Kristin L Campbell3, Annalijn I Conklin7,8.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The burden and costs of abdominal surgery for chronic conditions are on the rise, but could be reduced through self-management support. However, structured support to prepare for colorectal surgery is not routinely offered to patients in Canada. This study aimed to describe experiences and explore preferences for multimodal prehabilitation among colorectal surgery patients.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal surgery; Colorectal cancer; Prehabilitation; Preoperative care; Quality improvement
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35650598 PMCID: PMC9161453 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-022-08130-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.908
Patient characteristics
| Characteristic | Cancer patients ( | Non-cancer patients ( | Overall ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Female, n (%) | 6 (55%) | 6 (75%) | 12 (63%) |
| Age (years), median and range | 63 years (33–72) | 55 years (31–72) | 58 years (31–72) |
| Married, n (%) | 7 (64%) | 6 (75%) | 13 (68%) |
| Bachelor education or above, n (%) | 4 (36%) | 5 (63%) | 9 (47%) |
| High income level (> $100,000), n (%) | 6 (54%) | 5 (63%) | 11 (58%) |
| Full-time employed, n (%) | 3 (27%) | 5 (63%) | 8 (42%) |
| Non-smoker | 7 (64%) | 8 (100%) | 15 (79%) |
| Received pre-surgery bookleta, n (%) | 10 (91%) | 6 (75%) | 16 (84%) |
| Obtained pre-operative support from a health professional, n (%) | 5 (45%) | 1 (13%) | 6 (32%) |
a The pre-surgery booklet is a printed copy of the clinic’s patient information and education about colorectal surgery (10–12 pages), with one page of information on smoking, alcohol diet, and exercise
Fig. 1Conceptual model of identified themes, showing how mental and emotional health (theme 4) and informed decision-making, including informational needs (theme 2) were prominent concepts reinforced and determined by both access to and received social support (theme 1), and personalized care (theme 3); with mental health and informed decision-making mutually reinforcing one another in the setting of colorectal surgery
Illustrative quotes for Theme 1 on patients’ experiences and perspectives on preoperative care in colorectal cancer and abdominal surgery
| Theme | Examples of Quotes |
|---|---|
| Access to Help & Received Social Support | “I can’t talk about the fact that I need to go and buy adult diapers to my best friend, like I just don’t want to do that. To have a person who can hear all the nitty gritty and it doesn’t shock them, and they can empathize. That was huge” (FG1, P5) “Somebody that’s gone through it rather than an expert (FG3, P3) “I don’t know what I would have experienced if I hadn’t had the support from my doctors and my surgeons. They were all great” (FG1, P2) |
| “[M]y doctor told me when I was going in that I was going to the bathroom 10–15 times a day and bleeding like crazy, he just tells me I just got diarrhea, don’t worry about it. Two weeks later I was still doing it. So, the doctors should be taking things a little more serious to what is going on” (FG1, P3) | |
“[J]ust the sheer number of appointments like holy cow it’s a job to have…having cancer is a job.” (FG2, P2) “[I]t’s not them calling us, it’s when we get the urge, we have somebody to call because often times they are calling and it’s not convenient or we are forgotten what it is that we wanted to talk about” (FG2, P4) “[T]he accessibility. It also has to work around the time you have to get away from work if you are working. Do you have to come downtown to do it or can I go to a clinic close by? The more accessible it is the more likely you are to go.” (FG3, P3) “Once you know what you have to deal with you just deal with it. But it’s the unknown, once you know what you got to deal with, the outcomes and stuff like that. But you might have questions that come up, and if you have a phone number that you can phone and just answer your questions, that would be good, and move on.” (FG2, P4) “[R]eally you need somebody there to carry the mail for you” (FG2, P3) |
Illustrative quotes for Theme 2 on patients’ experiences and perspectives on preoperative care in colorectal cancer and abdominal surgery
| Theme | Examples of Quotes |
|---|---|
“I’d do it myself, but I’d like somebody to say that if I did my exercises and stuff I would be much better physically prepared for the operation than if I just laid around and smoked all the time” (FG1, P4) “I’m the kind of guy that likes information and I didn’t get sufficient information…I could have benefitted by a whole lot more of information myself. For other people, too much information can make you even more stressful but I didn’t have sufficient information” (FG3, P7) | |
“So I had hip replacement surgery and before I had it, they said ‘you should lose 40 pounds and you should do these exercises.’ Well I did it 100%, I lost the 40 pounds, I did the exercises because it was specific and I could understand the benefit. But with this colon cancer, I just don’t see any…you have to tell me something more” (FG3, P8) “I don’t think it’s a doctor-hospital, not our province’s medical responsibility to hold our hands to exercise” (FG1, P6) “I think to have a set program that could be delivered at a location by a physical trainer… would be perfect. Getting the information… I wouldn’t be inclined to do it myself. I would be more likely to just carry on with my own routine that I use. So, having to go in, having to fulfill a 4-week or 6-week program 2 to 3 times a week would be more advantageous I think” (FG2, P3) | |
“I said, “I’m not trying to sound like an idiot here guys, but can someone tell me what the heck you are talking about”?” (FG2, P2) “Not just a little pamphlet here’s a pamphlet, like I said before it doesn’t tell me anything. It’s the generic thing they tell everybody, half the stuff that was in the pamphlet wasn’t happening to me. Again, somebody to say, “here’s the things that are going to happen and this is what’s going to be after”” (FG1, P4) | |
“[I]t’s great to actually see someone do something and say, “okay I know I am doing it right” and not for example increasing my risk of getting a hernia” (FG2, P2) “I would put on more [materials for support] except the nutrition or support, exercise, I would say well-being and helping. Spiritual well-being and helping is more important” (FG2, P5) “a resource, somebody you could pick up the phone and call and ask some of these questions, to put your mind kind of at ease” (FG2, P4) |
Illustrative quotes for Theme 3 on patients’ experiences and perspectives on preoperative care in colorectal cancer and abdominal surgery
| Theme | Examples of Quotes |
|---|---|
| “So I had hip replacement surgery and before I had it, they said ‘you should lose 40 pounds and you should do these exercises.’ Well I did it 100%, I lost the 40 pounds, I did the exercises because it was specific and I could understand the benefit. But with this colon cancer, I just don’t see any…you have to tell me something more” (FG3, P8) | |
| “I would say not a need for any. I have managed through diet and exercise for more than two decades. So just knowing my own body.” (FG1, P6) | |
“I don’t feel like you get specific nutritional care from a hospital nutritionist (P1: Or the food). Yeah, but even aside from that there are bowel disease and these things that we’re dealing with, there’s a real holistic component to them and there is a real nutritional component to them and its super specific. Until that’s sort of learning process seems to change a little bit, I don’t know how they actually offer a service that has value to us individually” (FG1, P3) “Not just a little pamphlet here’s a pamphlet, like I said before it doesn’t tell me anything. It’s the generic thing they tell everybody, half the stuff that was in the pamphlet wasn’t happening to me. Again, somebody to say, “here’s the things that are going to happen and this is what’s going to be after”” (FG1, P4) “you might have questions that come up, and if you have a phone number that you can phone and just answer your questions, that would be good, and move on.” (FG2, P4) “Because mine was a non-cancer and it was like a prophylactic scenario I knew exactly what the surgery was going to be, all the steps in the surgery. Everything about it. But when I went to the pre-admission clinic I got on some sort of treadmill where they were talking to you in a rope sort of way because I’m sure they have to tick boxes off to make sure all the general information was given out the same way but it didn’t feel like it was customized to me.” (FG3, P4) “there’s a bit of a “one size fits all” thing. We can talk about this later where you know on the post-op I felt that this is written for an “overweight smoker”. Do I really have to wait 6 weeks before I pick up the cat? It just didn’t make sense to me.” (FG3, P1) “It would be nice to be able to pick up the phone if you have a question. But everyone is so different for everyone else so one size can’t really fit all in this situation.” (FG3, P3) |
Illustrative quotes for Theme 4 on patients’ experiences and perspectives on preoperative care in colorectal cancer and abdominal surgery
| Theme | Examples of Quotes |
|---|---|
“[S]omeone telling us now you are at this point, what’s next, what’s next, what our system is. What situation you’ll be treating, how good is your surgeon, how many people will be recovered from this. It gives you confidence. You feel much better. So, I hope all this is done at the very beginning.” (FG2, P5) “Yeah, its stress…. apprehension is the wrong word. It’s just a disappointment like you feel like you’re just sitting there, and you can’t go forward because you don’t know what forward is yet.” (FG2, P1) | |
| “[W]ith the stress that you’re under, you’re not thinking properly, you’re not eating properly” (FG3, P6) | |
“[I]t would have helped to release the stress so that you’re busy, focused on something else, so that you can control versus something that you couldn’t control” (FG3, P6) “[Mental health is] not addressed here at all and you’re really left floundering” (FG1, P1) “She spent a lot of time on mental health with me too, really talking a lot about that, which was really important” (FG1, P4) “have that person’s contact information so you could potentially call them if you’re in a crisis or if you need to talk to someone” (FG1, P3) “Fear.” (FG2, P1) “and then the anger thing, right? You sort of do the balance of trying to continue working and there’s a whole lot to take and also the fear of the unknown” (FG2, P2) “Dire messages from my doctor and surgeon, so I kind of had that in the back of my head.” (FG3, P1) “it was the bog-standardness of my experience in the pre-admission clinic which created a huge emotional burden (FG3, P4) “a resource, somebody you could pick up the phone and call and ask some of these questions, to put your mind kind of at ease” (FG2, P4) “I would put on more [materials for support] except the nutrition or support, exercise, I would say well-being and helping. Spiritual well-being and helping is more important [….] if the mind calms the bad things this is really helpful” (FG2, P5) |