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Noise in the operating room is common and often unavoidable, but there is mixed evidence of its impact. Previous research has suggested that excessive noise at the time when a patient is being 'put to sleep' may lead to care teams missing changes in monitors, having difficulties focusing or increasing stress. However, it is unknown ifs noise at this time affects the patient's satisfaction with the overall surgical experience. The investigators are conducting a survey study to evaluate patients' and anesthesiologists' overall satisfaction at the time of induction, before and after an education program promoting reducing noise in the Operating Room.
Study Purpose: The purpose of this study is to investigate how noise levels that the time of induction in the OR (operating room) effect patient and anesthesiologists' satisfaction with the overall surgical experience.
Hypothesis: The null hypothesis is that there is no improvement in patient satisfaction with the reduction of noise at the time of induction.
Study Population: The Investigators will be including two study populations: patients age 19 or older undergoing elective, non-cardiac surgery with general anesthesia as the primary mode of anesthesia, and; Anesthesiologists working in these rooms.
Research Method: This will be a pre/post survey study of patients and Anesthesiologists perspectives of noise in the OR. The investigators will survey participants before and after an educational intervention for OR staff.
Full description
1.0 BACKGROUND: Noise in the operating room (OR) is common whether it be related to surgical equipment, anesthetic monitors, or conversations between health care providers and patients regarding the procedure or patient status. In particular, certain periods can be louder than others, such as during induction and emergence of anesthesia, with preparation and conversations as the major sources of noise during induction. Noise at this time has been shown to lead to deleterious patient outcomes, as staff are unable to hear subtle or even significant changes in monitors, or have difficulty focusing during a critical time of induction. It has also been demonstrated that poor postoperative outcomes in pediatric patients and increase in stress levels in surgeons. While anecdotal, what is not elucidated in the literature is whether or not excess noise during induction affects a patient's perioperative satisfaction. Induction is often a distressing time for patients and extraneous noise may have a significant impact on their overall experience. This study is the first to explore the impact of noise at induction on patient satisfaction investigate whether a reduction in noise on induction can improve patient satisfaction. A secondary outcome is to achieve a decrease in noise level in non-cardiac operating rooms at this facility, promoting the concept of a 'sterile cockpit' (silence during induction) as borrowed from the aviation industry.
2.0 JUSTIFICATION: Studies have demonstrated that excessive noise in the operating room can be associated with critical error. Additionally, it has been shown that for Anesthesiologists' excessive noise can lead to increased. However, the effects of noise in the OR at the time of induction on patient experience remains unclear. While other validated questionnaires regarding patient satisfaction during the perioperative period have been established, these do not include questions regarding noise levels. Thus, this study will be the first to examine how noise during induction will affect patients' perioperative experience.
This tertiary care facility, St. Paul's Hospital, located in Vancouver, British Columbia, does not have a specific protocol or mandate with respect to noise in the operating room at any time. The recommended decibel levels in OR's is <45 decibels.
3.0 STUDY PURPOSE:
The purpose of this study is to:
4.0 HYPOTHESIS:
The null hypothesis is:
• There is no improvement in patient satisfaction with the reduction of noise at the time of induction.
5.0 OBJECTIVES:
The objectives of this study are to:
6.0 METHODS & STATISTICS: 6.1 Research Design Overview: Questionnaire Study
This study will take place over three phases.
Phase I:
Measure baseline characteristics of designated non-cardiac, elective operating rooms requiring a general anesthetic as primary mode of anesthesia. This will act as the control group for the study. Data collection will be performed by the attending Anesthesiologist using a portable decibel-meter and a smart phone with a decibel-meter application placed by the patient's head during induction. The Anesthesiologist will use the devices to determine a baseline noise level (maximum and mean decibel levels) in the OR from the time that patient enters the OR to when the patient is successfully intubated. The Anesthesiologist taking the measurement will conceal the devices from the others in the OR (including OR staff and patients). The investigators have received approval from the OR to use this concealed device. The same Anesthesiologist will then fill out a questionnaire regarding patient demographics (e.g. type of procedure, age, anxiety, significant hearing impairment, cognitive impairment) and observed noise in the operating room.
Patient participants will be recruited post-operatively in the postoperative care unit (PACU) and Surgical Day Care (SDC) if they are being discharged home on the same day or on the post-surgical wards if they are being admitted to hospital after surgery. The investigators will recruit patient participants post-operatively so as not to bias their experiences pre-operatively. They will be approached by the perioperative Anesthesiologist when deemed of appropriate mental capacity, to ask if they are willing to hear about the study. If they agree, the perioperative physician will alert a study team member of the eligible patient and they will approach the patient to discuss the study and seek consent. The recruiter will not be involved in the patient's direct care as to ensure patients that their care will not be influenced by whether they decide to participate or not. When recruited, they will complete an anonymous, self-administered questionnaire that will assess their satisfaction or dissatisfaction of care, using a Likert scale questionnaire designed specifically for extraneous noise during the time of induction. A Likert scale questionnaire is used as this has been most validated for perioperative satisfaction in multiple validated questionnaires.
Phase II:
This involves an educational intervention in the form of a didactic teaching session for the surgical teams, Anesthesiologists, Anesthesia Assistants, Perioperative Nurses, and Patient Care Aids The education will be focused on the importance of noise reduction during induction, specifically highlighting its potential positive effects on improving patient outcomes (and potentially patient satisfaction) and impact on surgical teams and Anesthesiologists. This will include formal presentations for each group of OR staff and daily prompts prior to the start of the day slate.
Phase III:
This will be conducted following education of perioperative health care professionals. Exactly the same as phase I, but after education. This involves repeating participant recruitment and data collection, with the Anesthesiologist completing the questionnaire and collecting noise level data, as well as patient participants completing self-administered questionnaires as a repeat of the protocol described above in phase I.
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400 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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