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Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine ; : 995-999, 2015.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-376247

ABSTRACT

  It was February 2007 that the pediatric surgery department was established in our hospital. Since then, the number of surgical cases of inguinal hernia has been increasing year after year. During 2013, a total of 48 patients underwent hernia surgery. Operations were performed mostly on the day the patients were hospitalized. Before the surgery, the patients and their relatives were told about the nature of the disease and treatment by word of mouth. Actually, however, we were to busy to take much time to talk with them. After surgery, members of patients’ families, being all anxiety, frequently asked us such questions as: - how soon will the patient be allowed to have a cup of tea or juice?; when can the patient do without the IV drip?; and how should the family take care of the patient at home? We presumed that the anxiety might stem from the inadequate explanation given orally by inexperienced nurses. To improve the situation, we, staffers in charge of pediatric inpatient care, and physicians in the outpatient clinic of the pediatric surgery department teamed up to prepare a pamphlet including a list of standardized answers to supposedly most frequently asked questions in the hospitalization setting. The draft of the pamphlet was shown to ward nurses to sound out their opinion on the contents. Based on the results of this survey, the pamphlet was completed. This paper deals with the pamphlet and a summary of nurses’s views on it.

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