Abstract

Background
 Informed consent is a cornerstone of ethical surgical practise. Patients undergoing emergency surgery have reduced time to consider their options when compared to the elective setting. Therefore, improving informed consent in this setting is critical. We aim to increase the provision of a pre-operative patient information leaflet (PIL) for patients undergoing an emergency appendicectomy by 50% over two audit cycles.
 Methods
 The same methodology were used for both cycles of this audit. Patients were identified through histopathology lists over a two week period. Medical notes were reviewed for documentation of provision of trust approved patient information leaflets. A QR code for an electronic version of the information leaflet was added to emergency clinic rooms, doctors handover rooms and the SHO on call bleep between audit periods.
 Results
 Empirical results from two audit cycles revealed that introduction of a QR code increased uptake from 0% of patients receiving the recommended appendicectomy leaflet, to 58%, achieving our aim.
 Conclusion
 The QR code provided a useful transportable resource, which was utilised by doctors. This provides scope for progression in provision of leaflet for other surgical issues, both in inpatient and outpatient settings, through utilisation of a QR code.

Full Text
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