Effectiveness of nurse-led preoperative assessment services for elective surgery : a systematic review


Autoria(s): Hines, Sonia; Chang, Anne M.; Ramis, Mary-Anne; Pike, Shannon
Data(s)

01/07/2010

Resumo

Background--The admission and assessment of patients for elective procedures is a task faced by all healthcare organisations that provide elective surgical services. Several different strategies have been used to facilitate the management of these tasks. Nurse-led preadmission clinics or services have been implemented in many health services as one of these management strategies; however their effectiveness has not been established. Objectives--The objective of this review was to examine the available research on the effectiveness of nurse-led elective surgery preoperative assessment clinics or services on patient outcomes.--Results--Of the 19 included articles, there were 10 audits of patient and hospital data, 3 surveys or questionnaires, 3 descriptive studies, 1 action research design, 1 prospective observational study and 1 RCT. Five of ten studies reporting data on cancellations rates found that nurse-led preadmission services reduced the number of day-of-surgery cancellations. Non-attendance for surgery was also reduced, with nine studies reporting decreases in the number of patients failing to attend. Eight studies reporting data on patient or parent satisfaction found high levels of satisfaction with nurse-led preadmission services. Three of four studies investigating the effect of the nurse-led preadmission service on patient anxiety found a reduction in reported anxiety levels. Three studies found that preoperative preparation was enhanced by the use of a nurse-led preadmission service.--Conclusions--While all included studies reported evidence of effectiveness for nurse-led preadmission services on a wide range of outcomes for elective surgery patients, the lack of experimental trials means that the level of evidence is low, and further research is needed.--Implications for practice--Nurse-led preadmission services may be an effective strategy for reducing procedural cancellations, failure to attend for procedures, and patient anxiety, however currently the evidence level is low.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39382/

Publicador

University of Adelaide, Faculty of Health Sciences

Relação

http://connect.jbiconnectplus.org/JBIReviewsLibrary.aspx

Hines, Sonia, Chang, Anne M., Ramis, Mary-Anne, & Pike, Shannon (2010) Effectiveness of nurse-led preoperative assessment services for elective surgery : a systematic review. JBI Library of Systematic Reviews, 8(15), pp. 621-660.

Direitos

© The Authors 2010

Fonte

Centre for Health Research; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Nursing

Palavras-Chave #111099 Nursing not elsewhere classified #111708 Health and Community Services #Nursing Assessment #Preoperative Care #Healthcare Management #Resource Use #Elective Surgery
Tipo

Journal Article