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Informed consent: the assessment of two structured interview approaches compared to the current approach

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2007

P. J. D. Dawes*
Affiliation:
Tutor Specialist, ENT Department, Dunedin Hospital, Dunedin, New Zealand.
L. O'Keefe
Affiliation:
Registrar, ENT Department, Manchester Royal Infirmary.
S. Adcock
Affiliation:
Registrar, Oral Surgery Department, Royal United Hospital, Bath.
*
P. J. D. Dawes, ENT Department, Freeman Hospital, Freeman Road, Newcastle upon Tyne.

Abstract

We prospectively studied 190 patients undergoing tonsillectomy or nasal surgery to assess the value of two structured interview techniques. There were four groups: Group A did not have a consent interview during the study period. Group B had an informal interview. Group C had a structured interview and Group D had a structured interview and were given an information sheet. Anxiety assessments were made and patients' recall of the operation name, details of the operation and its complications was assessed.

Patients had higher than normal anxiety levels when admitted, but several hours after the interview anxiety was normal for Groups B, C and D. Group A maintained a higher anxiety level.

Only 37 per cent correctly recalled the operation name, where as 87 per cent of all groups recalled the explanation of the operation. However, Groups C and D recalled a higher mean number of complications per patient.

A structured interview when obtaining informed consent increases the number of complications recalled without increasing pre-operative anxiety.

Type
Main Articles
Copyright
Copyright © JLO (1984) Limited 1992

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Footnotes

This work was presented to the Otolaryngological Research Society, 19 April 1991.

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