Abstract

Treatment of pediatric patients undergoing routine inguinal hernia repair usually includes a postoperative clinic visit. We prospectively assessed the necessity for the traditional postoperative visit. One hundred patients undergoing a routine inguinal hernia repair were randomly selected to receive either a follow-up visit at 4 weeks or a detailed instruction sheet and no follow-up visit. Parents were given a telephone questionnaire to determine overall satisfaction with their child's care and the usefulness of the follow-up visit or instruction sheet. Forty-seven of 50 parents of patients randomly assigned to a follow-up clinic visit (FU) and all 50 parents in the no follow-up group (NFU) completed the questionnaire. Sixty-eight percent of the FU group found the follow-up visit “helpful” and 59% found it “necessary.” Fifty-six percent would have been satisfied with a telephone call instead of a visit. In the NFU group only 4% thought a follow-up visit would have been “helpful” and 4% thought a visit was “necessary.” Ninety-six percent found the postoperative instruction sheet “helpful.” There was no difference between groups in overall satisfaction with the care received as assessed on a 5-point scale (4.7 FU group v 4.7 NFU group). Accurate postoperative instruction and open access to follow-up when required is as effective as the traditional postoperative clinic visit for patients who have undergone routine inguinal hernia repair.

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