Selected article for: "case treatment and health care"

Author: Daniel, Pinggera; Johannes, Kerschbaumer; Lukas, Grassner; Matthias, Demetz; Sebastian, Hartmann; Claudius, Thomé
Title: Effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on patient presentation and perception to a neurosurgical outpatient clinic
  • Cord-id: rmrp8st3
  • Document date: 2021_2_18
  • ID: rmrp8st3
    Snippet: Background The world currently faces the novel COVID-19 pandemic with cutbacks in patient care. Little is known about the effects of a pandemic on the presentation and admission to an outpatient clinic. Our aim was to gain a better understanding of the effects of reduced neurosurgical care access from the patient perspective, especially in terms of anxiety and urgency of treatment, and to improve outpatient management in case of a potential second wave and potential restrictions on health care.
    Document: Background The world currently faces the novel COVID-19 pandemic with cutbacks in patient care. Little is known about the effects of a pandemic on the presentation and admission to an outpatient clinic. Our aim was to gain a better understanding of the effects of reduced neurosurgical care access from the patient perspective, especially in terms of anxiety and urgency of treatment, and to improve outpatient management in case of a potential second wave and potential restrictions on health care. Methods: A questionnaire study over a period of four weeks following the COVID-19 lock down at our academical neurosurgical department was performed. A 15-items questionnaire was distributed to the patients with 3 additional questions to be answered by the treating neurosurgeon. Results: A total of 437 questionnaires was analyzed. Overall anxiety to visit a general practitioner or the outpatient facility within the hospital was very low among patients. A quarter of all appointments had to be postponed due to COVID-19, in 0.6 % of which postponement was perceived as incorrect by the treating neurosurgeon. 43% did not get an appointment due to the restrictions, 20 % did not want to bother the medical system and only 4 % were afraid to get infected in the hospital. Conclusion: Despite COVID-19, patients in need of neurosurgical service were hardly afraid to visit doctors and/or hospitals. Nonetheless, due to legal requirements, access has been restricted causing potential collateral damages in a small subset of neurosurgical patients.

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