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An exploratory study of patients’ and carers’ preferences for post-discharge surgical wound monitoring using survey and interviews

Tanner, Judith; Brierley Jones, Lyn; Westwood, Nigel; Wloch, Catherine; Rogers, Luke J.; Vaja, Ricky; Dearling, Jeremy; Wilson, Keith; Brown, Colin; Harrington, Pauline; Murphy, Gavin J.

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Authors

Lyn Brierley Jones

Nigel Westwood

Catherine Wloch

Luke J. Rogers

Ricky Vaja

Jeremy Dearling

Keith Wilson

Colin Brown

Pauline Harrington

Gavin J. Murphy



Abstract

Objectives
To explore patients’ and carers’ preferences for post-discharge surgical wound monitoring.

Design
Explanatory mixed methods study with an online survey followed by online interviews.

Setting
The online survey was distributed via the Cardiothoracic Interdisciplinary Research Network and cardiac surgery patient and public involvement groups in London and Leicester, United Kingdom. Participants were invited to share the survey link with other patients and carers. Interviewees were recruited through the survey.

Participants
Seventy participants completed the survey: 74% patients and 16% carers. A range of ages, sex, ethnicities and geographical locations were represented. Six survey patient participants volunteered to be interviewed.

Findings
Themes identified were the impact on patients of having a surgical site infection, patients’ preferences for post-discharge surgical wound follow-up, access to specialist support, wound monitoring using digital technology and receiving information from the hospital about wounds and wound care. Interviewees described feeling isolated after discharge from hospital and 10% of survey patient respondents, including four of the six interviewees, reported hospital readmissions. Survey respondents’ preferred routes for providing hospitals with wound information was over the telephone (30%), emails (24%), text messages (16%), and photos sent securely (14%). All six interviewees’ preference was for digital approaches using images. Survey respondents were least likely (50%) to reply to questionnaires that required software to be downloaded and installed. Interviewees considered digital wound monitoring to be convenient and the best use of patient and staff resources. A new theme was identified where patients wanted to become more involved in treating their surgical wounds at home.

Conclusion
Experiences described by participants suggests there is a need to improve post-discharge wound monitoring. A new approach should be proactive, ongoing and provide easy access to healthcare services. Digital surgical wound monitoring offers these benefits and is acceptable to patients.

Citation

Tanner, J., Brierley Jones, L., Westwood, N., Wloch, C., Rogers, L. J., Vaja, R., Dearling, J., Wilson, K., Brown, C., Harrington, P., & Murphy, G. J. (2025). An exploratory study of patients’ and carers’ preferences for post-discharge surgical wound monitoring using survey and interviews. BMJ Open, 15(1), Article e087320. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-087320

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 10, 2025
Online Publication Date Jan 25, 2025
Publication Date 2025-01
Deposit Date Jan 13, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jan 25, 2025
Journal BMJ Open
Electronic ISSN 2044-6055
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 15
Issue 1
Article Number e087320
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-087320
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/44226066
Publisher URL https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/1/e087320

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