Abstract

Routine inguinal hernia repair in the pediatric population has a low complication rate. Very few complications are identified at follow-up, which brings into question the necessity of the traditional postoperative visit. A retrospective review of patients who had undergone a routine inguinal hernia repair in 1991 at our institution was done in order to determine our current follow-up practices and complication rate. To determine the perceived necessity for the follow-up visit, parents were given a short telephone questionnaire. Of 175 eligible patients, questionnaires were completed on 145. Of these 145 patients, 77 were seen in follow-up by the pediatric surgeon only, 43 by the family doctor only, 12 were seen by both, and 13 patients had no physician follow-up. The sole complication was a stitch abscess (complication rate 0.7%). Results of the questionnaire showed that 90% of parents felt the follow-up visit was “helpful,” 80% felt it was “necessary,” and 35% would have been satisfied with telephone follow-up. The main purpose of the postoperative visit appears to be parental reassurance. Careful preoperative and postoperative instruction and reassurance may be sufficient in a significant number of cases.

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