Development and psychometric testing of a quality of recovery score after general anesthesia and surgery in adults.

UNLABELLED A variety of methods have been used to quantify aspects of recovery after anesthesia. Most are narrowly focused, are not patient-rated, and have not been validated. We therefore set out to develop a patient-rated quality of recovery score. We constructed a 61-item questionnaire that asked individuals (patients and relatives, medical and nursing staff; total n = 136) to rate various postoperative items describing features a patient may experience postoperatively. The most highly ranked items were included in a final nine-point index score, which we called the "QoR Score." We then studied two cohorts of surgical patients (n = 449). There was good convergent validity between the QoR Score and the visual analog scale score (rho = 0.55, P < 0.0001). Discriminant construct validity was supported by comparing resultant QoR Scores in patients undergoing day-stay, minor, and major surgery (P = 0.008), as well as a negative correlation with duration of hospital stay (rho = -0.20, P < 0.0001), and, using multivariate regression, demonstrating a significant negative relationship between QoR Score and female gender (P = 0.048) and older age (P = 0.041). There was also good interrater agreement (rho = 0.55, P < 0.0001), test-retest reliability (median rho = 0.61, P < 0.0001), and internal consistency (alpha = 0.57 and 0.90, P < 0.0001). There was a significant difference between the groups of patients recovering from major and minor surgery (P < 0.001). This study demonstrates that the QoR Score has good validity, reliability, and clinical acceptability in patients undergoing many types of surgery. IMPLICATIONS We set out to develop a patient-rated quality of recovery score (QoR) that could be used both as a measure of outcome in perioperative trials and for clinical audit. We first surveyed patients and staff to identify important aspects of recovery, then developed a nine-point QoR Score. This was then compared with other measures of postoperative outcome. We found that the QoR Score is a useful measure of recovery after anesthesia and surgery.

[1]  D. Tong,et al.  Predictive Factors in Global and Anesthesia Satisfaction in Ambulatory Surgical Patients , 1997, Anesthesiology.

[2]  F. Dexter,et al.  Development of a measure of patient satisfaction with monitored anesthesia care: the Iowa Satisfaction with Anesthesia Scale. , 1997 .

[3]  F. Dexter,et al.  Development of a Measure of Patient Satisfaction with Monitored Anesthesia Care: The Iowa Satisfaction with Anesthesia Scale , 1997, Anesthesiology.

[4]  F. Servin,et al.  Emergence of Elderly Patients from Prolonged Desflurane, Isoflurane, or Propofol Anesthesia , 1997, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[5]  P. Myles,et al.  Postoperative ‘minor’ complications , 1997, Anaesthesia.

[6]  J. Alhashemi,et al.  Cost-effectiveness of inhalational, balanced and total intravenous anaesthesia for ambulatory knee surgery , 1997, Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthesie.

[7]  M. Lum,et al.  Measuring Anaesthetic Outcomes , 1996, Anaesthesia and intensive care.

[8]  C. Lien,et al.  The Comparative Effects of Sevoflurane Versus Propofol in the Induction and Maintenance of Anesthesia in Adult Patients , 1996, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[9]  M. Grace,et al.  Recovery characteristics following induction of anaesthesia with a combination of thiopentone and propofol , 1994, Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthesie.

[10]  B. Horan,et al.  Mortality associated with anaesthesia in New South Wales, 1984‐1990 , 1994 .

[11]  T M Gill,et al.  A critical appraisal of the quality of quality-of-life measurements. , 1994, JAMA.

[12]  M M Cohen,et al.  The Postoperative Interview: Assessing Risk Factors for Nausea and Vomiting , 1994, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[13]  W. J. Russell,et al.  The Australian Incident Monitoring Study: An Analysis of 2000 Incident Reports , 1993, Anaesthesia and intensive care.

[14]  M. Liang,et al.  Comparative Measurement Sensitivity of Short and Longer Health Status Instruments , 1992, Medical care.

[15]  P. White,et al.  Comparison of Induction, Maintenance, and Recovery Characteristics of Sevoflurane‐N2O and Propofol‐Sevoflurane‐N2O With Propofol‐Isoflurane‐N2O Anesthesia , 1992, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[16]  L Strunin,et al.  Multicenter study of general anesthesia. II. Results. , 1990, Anesthesiology.

[17]  Lewis E. Kazis,et al.  Effect Sizes for Interpreting Changes in Health Status , 1989, Medical care.

[18]  M J Campbell,et al.  Statistics in Medicine: Calculating confidence intervals for some non-parametric analyses , 1988 .

[19]  C. O'boyle,et al.  Mood evaluation and outpatient anaesthesia , 1988, Anaesthesia.

[20]  I. McDowell,et al.  Measuring health: A guide to rating scales and questionnaires, 3rd ed. , 2006 .

[21]  N. Boyd,et al.  The development of a method for assessing the quality of life of cancer patients. , 1984, British Journal of Cancer.

[22]  J A Aldrete,et al.  A Postanesthetic Recovery Score , 1970, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[23]  J I Westbrook,et al.  Patient satisfaction: methodological issues and research findings. , 1993, Australian health review : a publication of the Australian Hospital Association.

[24]  G. Guyatt,et al.  Measuring change over time: assessing the usefulness of evaluative instruments. , 1987, Journal of chronic diseases.

[25]  M. Cohen,et al.  A survey of 112,000 anaesthetics at one teaching hospital (1975–83) , 1986, Canadian Anaesthetists' Society journal.

[26]  B Kirshner,et al.  A methodological framework for assessing health indices. , 1985, Journal of chronic diseases.

[27]  A. Dobson,et al.  Measuring the quality of life of cancer patients: a concise QL-index for use by physicians. , 1981, Journal of chronic diseases.