4.4 Article

Patients' perceptions of barriers to enhanced recovery after emergency abdominal surgery

Journal

LANGENBECKS ARCHIVES OF SURGERY
Volume 406, Issue 2, Pages 405-412

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00423-020-02032-5

Keywords

Emergencies; Laparotomy; General surgery; Postoperative period; Nutritional sciences; Rehabilitation

Categories

Funding

  1. Zealand Regional Research Foundation [15-000342]
  2. Independent Research Fund Denmark [6166-00028B]

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This study investigated patient-perceived barriers towards nutrition, mobilization, and early discharge after major emergency abdominal surgery. The main barriers identified were food aversion for nutrition, fatigue for mobilization, and a variety of factors for early discharge. Fatigue was consistently a significant barrier across different aspects of recovery.
Purpose The patient-perceived barriers towards an optimized short-term recovery after major emergency abdominal surgery are unknown. The purpose was to investigate which patient-perceived barriers dominated concerning nutrition, mobilization, and early discharge after major emergency abdominal surgery. Methods An explorative study, which focused on patient-perceived barriers for early discharge, mobilization, and nutrition, was performed within an enhanced recovery perioperative setting in major emergency abdominal surgery. Patients were asked daily from postoperative day (POD) 1 to POD 7 of their self-perceived barriers towards getting fully mobilization and resuming normal oral intake. From POD 3 to POD 7, patients were asked regarding self-perceived barriers towards early discharge. Results A total of 101 patients that underwent major emergency abdominal surgery were included for final analysis from March 2017 to August 2017. The main patient self-perceived barrier towards sufficient nutrition was dominated by food aversion (including loss of appetite). The main patient self-perceived barrier towards sufficient mobilization throughout the study period was fatigue. The patient self-perceived barriers towards early discharge were more diffuse and lacked a dominant variable throughout the study period; however, fatigue was the most pronounced barrier throughout the study period. The leading initial variables were postoperative ileus, insufficient nutrition, and epidural catheter. The leading later variables besides fatigue included awaiting normalization of biochemistry values, pain, and the perception of insufficient oral intake. Conclusions The major patient-perceived factors that limited postoperative recovery after major emergency abdominal surgery included food aversion regarding normalization of oral intake and fatigue regarding mobilization and early discharge.

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