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The efficiency of communication between junior hospital doctors and 77 general surgical patients was assessed by using standardized questionnaires before and after the doctor/patient interview on both the patient and the house doctor. Patients were better informed about their illness than their surgery, and doctors wrongly estimated patients' knowledge in 41% of cases. Self-reported preoperative anxiety of patients was low and was estimated wrongly by house doctors in 58% of cases. In 52% of cases house doctors were considered by patients to be the most important source of information, but patients had little comprehension of the seniority of other doctors. Although 60% of patients were satisfied with the communication, the majority complained of lack of information concerning convalescence, postoperative pain and routine ward procedures.
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Jessica Richards
Gloucestershire Royal Hospital
Peter J. McDonald
Government of the Northern Territory
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
University of Southampton
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Richards et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1fc097d0275cc5a18ab9dd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/014107688507801109