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Decreasing Patient Dissatisfaction With Unplanned Cesarean Sections

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Cesarean Section
Patient Satisfaction
Interventions
Behavioral: Pre-operative support
Registration Number
NCT02472327
Lead Sponsor
Albany Medical College
Brief Summary

Patient satisfaction after an unplanned cesarean section was studied and in the previous study it was noted that there were common themes that lead to patient dissatisfaction. The four common themes were: lack of trust regarding the indications for surgery, communication issues, loss of control, and fear during the situation. The purpose of this second phase of this study is to try and improve patient dissatisfaction by offering additional emotional support prior to the c/s with the hope of decreasing the trust issues toward physicians, decreasing the communication barriers, and decreasing the fear and loss of control. The additional emotional support that will be received prior to the cesarean section will be scripted based upon the findings of the investigators' prior study - the patient will be asked four questions and each question addresses the four themes that were noted in the previous study.

Detailed Description

All patients admitted to the Labor and Delivery unit at Albany Medical College who are in labor or being evaluated for possible indicated delivery will receive information regarding the study. Those who consent to participation, if they are then determined to need a cesarean birth will be randomized into two groups. The first group will receive pre-operative counseling by the obstetrics resident who will be performing the cesarean, the second group will receive usual care. The counseling sheet was determined based upon the findings of a previous study done at this institution, and addresses four themes that were recurrent aspects of patient dissatisfaction after cesarean birth: poor communication, trust of physicians, loss of control, and fear of surgery.

Two weeks after the cesarean section, patients participating in the study are called on the phone by one of the investigators. A patient satisfaction survey, using a Likert scale is administered. This investigator is blinded as to whether the patient has received the additional counseling or not. Comparison of these scores will be used to determine whether pre-operative counseling can reduce dissatisfaction in patients undergoing unplanned cesarean sections.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
208
Inclusion Criteria
  • pregnant patient admitted at Albany Medical Center
  • Faculty group patient
Exclusion Criteria

--Patients who have scheduled cesarean sections

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Pre-operative supportPre-operative supportThese patients will receive additional emotional support prior to undergoing an unplanned cesarean section during labor.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Patient satisfaction2 weeks postpartum

Two weeks postpartum study subjects will participate in a patient satisfaction survey, using a phone interview, and a quantitative Likert scale to determine whether pre-operative counseling improves patient satisfaction scores.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Albany Medical College

🇺🇸

Albany, New York, United States

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