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SAGE Publications, Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, 1(31), p. 63-68, 2003

DOI: 10.1177/0310057x0303100113

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Patients’ Knowledge of and Attitudes towards Awareness and Depth of Anaesthesia Monitoring

Journal article published in 2003 by Kate Leslie ORCID, Myles Ps, L. Lee, Paul S. Myles ORCID, N. Lerch, C. Fiddes
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Awareness during anaesthesia is uncommon (~0.1%), but causes significant anxiety, dissatisfaction and morbidity for patients. Several electroencephalographic monitors hold promise as monitors for awareness. We therefore conducted a survey to evaluate patients’ knowledge of and attitudes towards awareness and monitors of anaesthetic depth. Two hundred consenting, preoperative patients completed a seven-item questionnaire. The median number of previous operations was 2 (inter-quartile range, 1–5). Thirteen patients reported an experience which they thought might be awareness (2% of operations performed on the cohort). Only 56% of patients had heard about awareness before and many (35%) of these had heard about it in the media. Many (35%) were uncertain about what might cause awareness. Many (42.5%) were anxious about awareness: female sex and not having heard about awareness before were significant predictors of anxiety. Nevertheless only 34% were willing to pay for a proven awareness monitor if they were at low risk and only 50% if they were at high risk. Perceived risk and a previous awareness experience were significant predictors of willingness to pay for awareness monitoring.