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Patient Satisfaction With Virtual Visits

Evaluating Patient Satisfaction With 2-week Post-operative Virtual Visits Compared to In-office Visits: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Terminated
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04855708
Enrollment
12
Registered
2021-04-22
Start date
2021-02-05
Completion date
2024-01-12
Last updated
2024-09-05

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Satisfaction, Patient

Keywords

Gynecology, Virtual visit, Post-operative, Patient satisfaction

Brief summary

This study aims to evaluate the safety and efficacy of virtual postoperative visits as compared to in-office postoperative visits for patients undergoing minimally invasive hysterectomy. The investigators hypothesize that virtual visits will be non-inferior to in-person visits in terms of patient satisfaction. The primary objective for this study is to evaluate patient satisfaction of the postoperative visit experience, as measured by the Press Ganey Medical Practice Survey and Medical Practice Telemedicine Survey. The secondary objectives include evaluating the incidence of a new diagnosis of a postoperative complication requiring medical treatment (e.g. calling in of a prescription), an office visit with CNP or MIGS surgeon, or an urgent care or ER visit. Post-operative complications include infection (urinary, pulmonary, wound, pelvic abscess, and bloodstream), thromboembolic events, bleeding; and issues with wound healing, such as dehiscence. The investigators will record no-show rates, visit times, and estimated travel distance as measured by distance of home to clinic site.

Detailed description

This is a two arm, randomized non-inferiority clinical trial that will take place within the Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery division in the Women's Health Institute of the Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH. Population - The Investigators will recruit patients undergoing benign minimally invasive hysterectomy (laparoscopic, robotic, and vaginal). Inclusion criteria include patients \>18 years of age who are able to provide informed consent without assistance, speak English, and who have access to a phone or device equipped for virtual visits. Patients will be excluded if the staff surgeon determines they are inappropriate for virtual follow-up, if there is suspicion of malignancy, if they are unable to provide consent, or if they do not have access to technology that enables virtual visits. Recruitment - Enrolled participants will be randomized to either a two-week virtual postoperative visit with a certified nurse practitioner (CNP) or a two-week in-office postoperative visit with a certified nurse practitioner (CNP) in a 1:1 allocation ratio. Block randomizations with block size of 4 will be assigned to nurse providers independently. Randomization schedules will be implemented by Redcap. Data collection - The primary outcome of this study is patient satisfaction, as measured by the Press Ganey Medical Practice Survey and Medical Practice Telemedicine Survey. These questionnaires are currently sent to all patients by the Office of Patient Experience at our institution four days after their postoperative appointment. The investigators will provide verbal reminders about study participation and survey administration at the visit. Survey data will be obtained through the Office of Patient Experience and imported into RedCap. The secondary outcome is a new diagnosis of a postoperative complication requiring medical treatment (e.g. calling in of a prescription), an office visit with a CNP or MIGS surgeon, or an urgent care or ER visit. Complications include infection (urinary, pulmonary, wound, pelvic abscess, and bloodstream); thromboembolic events; bleeding; and issues with wound healing, such as dehiscence. Calvien-Dindo classification system for postoperative complications will be used. The Investigators will also look at no-show rates, visit times, and travel distance. The investigators will collect basic demographic information from the EMR, including age, BMI, parity, and prior surgical history. Surgical indication, procedure performed, length of hospital stay, and perioperative outcomes (reoperation, readmission, unscheduled office or virtual visits (i.e. earlier than the scheduled 2 week visit), ED/urgent care visits, infection rates) will also be obtained. No-show rates will be obtained through the EMR. The investigators will also note if a planned virtual visit is unable to be completed due to technical difficulties, or is converted to a telephone visit. Travel distance from home to clinic site will be calculated using average travel time with minimal traffic based on participant's zip code using Google Maps. The investigators will collect the reason for ineligibility for all patients deemed such by staff surgeons. All participants will be assigned a study number to facilitate de-identification of data. Data will be compiled in RedCap and securely stored on an encrypted server. Statistical analysis Power Calculation: The Investigators hypothesized that patient satisfaction would be non-inferior for patients randomized to the postoperative virtual visit compared to those randomized to in-person virtual visit. Sample size of 70 patients in each arm is needed to achieve 90% power to detect a non-inferiority margin of -0.20. Allowing for a dropout rate of 20%, 88 patients will be recruited in each arm. Analysis plan: For the primary outcome, the Farrington-Manning score test for non-inferiority will be performed, for both intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses. Approximately normally-distributed continuous measures will be summarized using means and standard deviations and will be compared using two-sample t-tests. Continuous measures that show departure from normality and ordinal measures will be summarized using medians and quartiles and will be compared using Wilcoxon rank sum tests. Categorical factors will be summarized using frequencies and percentages and will be compared using Pearson's chi-square tests or Fisher's exact tests. All analyses will be done using SAS (version 9.4, The SAS Institute, Cary, NC) and a p \< 0.05 will be considered statistically significant. Study Timeline: The MIGS division performs at least 20-30 hysterectomies per month. The Investigators estimate to achieve our target recruitment in 7-8 months.

Interventions

Patients randomized to this group will have a virtual 2-week post-operative visit

Patients randomized to this group will have a in-person 2-week post-operative visit

Sponsors

The Cleveland Clinic
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Age greater than 18 * Able to provide informed consent without assistance * English speaking * Access to phone or device equipped for virtual visit

Exclusion criteria

* Surgeon determines participant is not a good candidate for virtual follow-up visit * Suspicion of malignancy * Unable to provide informed consent * No access to technology for virtual visit

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Patient satisfaction at 2-weeks2-weeksThe Press Ganey Medical Practice Survey is used to provide feedback on improving aspects of the clinic experience. It measures access, moving through the visit, nurse/assistant, care provider, personal issues and overall assessment. The scale exists from 1-5 (1=very poor, 5=very good)

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026