Background:Hospital mastectomy rates vary. This study explores the relationship between mastectomy rates and breast cancer patients' consultation and decision-making experiences with specialist clinicians.Methods:Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with 65 patients from three purposively selected breast units from a single UK region. Patients provided with a choice of breast cancer surgery (breast conservation therapy (BCT) or mastectomy) were purposively recruited from high, medium and low case-mix-adjusted mastectomy rate units.Results:Low mastectomy rate unit patients' consultation and decision-making experiences were markedly different to those of the medium and high mastectomy rate breast units. Treatment variation was associated with patients' perception of the most reassuring and least disruptive treatment; the content and style of information provision (equipoise or directed); level of patient participation in decision making; the time and process of decision making and patient autonomy in decision making. The provision of more comprehensive less directive information and greater autonomy, time and support of independent decision making were associated with a lower uptake of BCT.Conclusion:Variation in hospital mastectomy rates was associated with differences in the consultation and decision-making experiences of breast cancer patients. Higher mastectomy rates were associated with the facilitation of more informed autonomous patient decision making.
Neurally triggered breaths reduce trigger delay, improve ventilator response times, and may decrease work of breathing in children with bronchiolitis. Further analysis is required to determine if neurally triggered breaths will improve patient-ventilator synchrony.
Fifty-two patients with gastro-oesophageal reflux disease refractory to medical treatment were randomized to undergo a Nissen total (360 degrees wrap) or Lind partial (300 degrees wrap) transabdominal fundoplication. Each group was comparable in number (26 patients), mean age (47 and 48 years) and sex distribution (eight women). Preoperative and postoperative assessment involved a modified Visick score, 22-h intraoesophageal pH monitoring, endoscopy and manometry. Follow-up was at 6 weeks and between 3 and 33 (mean 13) months. The prevalence of heartburn and regurgitation and the results of pH monitoring improved significantly after both operations (P less than 0.001). At early assessment eight previously asymptomatic patients (31 per cent) from the Nissen group and six (23 per cent) from the Lind group experienced difficulty swallowing. Ten patients (38 per cent) in each group complained of 'gas bloat'. Both complications had improved at late assessment in the majority of patients. No statistically significant advantage could be demonstrated for either operation.
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