The purpose of this study is to determine if a nurse telephone follow-up to parents of children who underwent a removal of their tonsils would be effective in reducing pain intensity, complications and resort to other healthcare services
Tonsillectomy in children is a common elective day surgery. In the United States, 530 000 children under 15 years of age underwent a tonsillectomy in 2006. This minor surgery generates moderate to severe pain and many postoperative complications, both in the early postoperative phase and for at least 7 days. Patients are discharged home a few hours after tonsillectomy, and parents take over their child's care. But not all parents have the ability and knowledge required to adequately manage the pain and complications. This sub-optimal care situation has a significant impact on the child's convalescence and can lead to poor pain management, dehydration, poor rest and sleep quality, nausea, vomiting as well as an increase in the risk of secondary haemorrhage. Many interventions have been evaluated to improve pain management, such as education strategies for parents or children and tools to guide parents. However, none of these strategies have obtained significant results on children's pain intensity post-tonsillectomy. A nurse telephone follow-up can significantly reduce pain intensity of adults who undergo ambulatory surgery. This intervention is defined as multiple telephone calls made to the patient by a nurse, after discharge, to provide information, and review discharge prescriptions and management of care by the patient himself or by a care-giver. Only a few studies have explored nurse telephone follow-up for children who underwent tonsillectomy. The design of these studies, including the time-periods chosen for data collection, were not properly determined to adequately evaluate the impact of the intervention on management of pain and prevention of postoperative complications. Thus, we planned to determine if a nurse telephone follow-up, made to parents following their child's tonsillectomy, would contribute to decrease pain intensity, incidence of postoperative complications and resort to other healthcare services.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
52
The intervention group received a telephone follow-up by a nurse on the 1st, 3rd, 5th and 10th postoperative day.
CHU Ste.Justine's
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Pain intensity scores on the 3rd day after surgery
Mean pain intensity score on the 3rd postoperative day (POD)
Time frame: Pain assessed on the 3rd postoperative day
Pain intensity scores on the 5th day after surgery
Mean pain intensity score on the 5th postoperative day (POD)
Time frame: Pain assessed on the 5th postoperative day
Pain intensity scores on the 10th day after surgery
Mean pain intensity score on the 10th postoperative day (POD)
Time frame: Pain assessed on the 10th postoperative day
postoperative complications
Assess complications and adverse events at each time points of the study
Time frame: Complications assessed on the following postoperative days: First day, 3rd day, 5th day and 10th day
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