It’s Big Surgery: Preoperative Expressions of Risk, Responsibility, and Commitment to Treatment after High-risk Operations
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Author
Pecanac, Kristen E.
Kehler, Jacqueline M.
Brasel, Karen J.
Steffens, Nicole M.
McKneally, Martin F.
Schwarze, Margaret L.
Published Version
https://doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0000000000000314Metadata
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Pecanac, Kristen E., Jacqueline M. Kehler, Karen J. Brasel, Zara Cooper, Nicole M. Steffens, Martin F. McKneally, and Margaret L. Schwarze. 2014. “It?s Big Surgery.” Annals of Surgery 259 (3) (March): 458–463. doi:10.1097/sla.0000000000000314.Abstract
ObjectiveTo identify the processes surgeons use to establish patient buy-in to postoperative treatments.
Background
Surgeons generally believe they confirm the patient's commitment to an operation and all ensuing postoperative care, before surgery. How surgeons get buy-in and whether patients participate in this agreement is unknown.
Methods
We used purposive sampling to identify three surgeons from different subspecialties who routinely perform high-risk operations at each of three distinct medical centers (Toronto, ON; Boston, MA; Madison, WI). We recorded preoperative conversations with three to seven patients facing high-risk surgery with each surgeon (n = 48) and used content analysis to analyze each preoperative conversation inductively.
Results
Surgeons conveyed the gravity of high-risk operations to patients by emphasizing the operation is “big surgery” and that a decision to proceed invoked a serious commitment for both the surgeon and the patient. Surgeons were frank about the potential for serious complications and the need for intensive care. They rarely discussed the use of prolonged life-supporting treatment, and patients’ questions were primarily confined to logistic or technical concerns. Surgeons regularly proceeded through the conversation in a manner that suggested they believed buy-in was achieved, but this agreement was rarely forged explicitly.
Conclusions
Surgeons who perform high-risk operations communicate the risks of surgery and express their commitment to the patient's survival. However, they rarely discuss prolonged life-supporting treatments explicitly and patients do not discuss their preferences. It is not possible to determine patients’ desires for prolonged postoperative life support based on these preoperative conversations alone.
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3936655/Terms of Use
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