Abstract
Purpose
Patients express high anxiety preoperatively, because of fears related to anesthesia and its implications. The purpose of this survey was to gain insight into these fears and to study whether they are affected by patients’ sex, age, education, or previous experience of anesthesia.
Methods
Questionnaires with fixed questions were distributed to consenting, consecutive surgical patients before the pre-anesthetic visit. The questionnaires included patients’ demographics and questions related to their fears about anesthesia.
Results
Four-hundred questionnaires were collected and analyzed. Eighty-one percent of patients experience preoperative anxiety. The main sources of their anxiety were fear of postoperative pain (84 %), of not waking up after surgery (64.8 %), of being nauseous or vomiting (60.2 %), and of drains and needles (59.5 %). Patients are less concerned about being paralyzed because of anesthesia (33.5 %) or of revealing personal issues (18.8 %). Gender seems to affect patients fears, with women being more afraid (85.3 vs. 75.6 % of men, p = 0.014). The effects of patients’ age, level of education, and previous experience of anesthesia are minor, except for individual questions. Sixty-three percent of our patients (mostly women 67.4 vs. 57.4 % of men, p = 0.039) talk about these fears with their relatives, although a vast majority of 95.5 % would prefer to talk with the anesthesiologist and be reassured by him.
Conclusion
All patients, mostly women, express fears about anesthesia; this fear leads to preoperative anxiety. Slight differences are observed for some individual questions among patients of different sex, education level, and previous experience of anesthesia.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Valenzuela Millán J, Barrera Serrano JR, Ornelas Aguirre JM. Anxiety in preoperative anesthetic procedures. Cir Cir. 2010;78(2):147–51.
Ramsay M. A survey of pre-operative fear. Anaesthesia. 1972;27(4):396–402.
Tolksdorf W, Berlin J, Rey ER, Schmidt R, Kollmeier W, Storz W, Ridder T, Schaetzle P. Preoperative stress. Study of the mental behavior and parameters of physiological stress in nonpremedicated patients during the preoperative period. Anaesthesist. 1984;33:212–7.
Egbert LD, Battit G, Turndorf H, Beecher HK. The value of the preoperative visit by an anesthetist. A study of doctor-patient rapport. JAMA. 1963;185(7):553–5.
Shevde K, Panagopoulos G. A survey of 800 patients’ knowledge, attitudes, and concerns regarding anesthesia. Anesth Analg. 1991;73(2):190–8.
Elsass P, Eikard J, Junge J, Lykke J, Staun P, Feldt-Rasmussen M. Psychological effect of detailed preanesthetic information. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 1987;31(7):579–83.
Hume MA, Kennedy B, Asbury AJ. Patient knowledge of anaesthesia and peri-operative care. Anaesthesia. 1994;49(8):715–8.
S. Eckersall S, Riley R. Patients’ pre-operative knowledge and concerns about anaesthesia. Anaesthesia, 1995;50(2):180.
Chew ST, Tan T, Tan SS, Ip-Yam PC. A survey of patients’ knowledge of anaesthesia and perioperative care. Singapore Med J. 1998;39(9):399–402.
Matthey P, Finucane BT, Finegan BA. The attitude of the general public towards preoperative assessment and risks associated with general anesthesia. Can J Anaesth. 2001;48(4):333–9.
Moro ET, Godoy RC, Goulart AP, Muniz L, Modolo NS. Main concerns of patients regarding the most common complications in the post-anesthetic care unit. Rev Bras Anestesiol. 2009;59(6):716–24.
McGaw CD, Hanna WJ. Knowledge and fears of anaesthesia and surgery. The Jamaican perspective. West Indian Med J. 1998;47(2):64–7.
Huang Y, Yang K, Ren H, Luo A. A survey of elective surgical patients’ attitudes toward anesthesia in PUMC hospital. Chin Med Sci J. 2002;17(2):77–80.
Williams JG, Jones JR. Psychophysiological responses to anesthesia and operation. JAMA. 1968;203:415–7.
Maranets I, Kain ZN. Preoperative anxiety and intraoperative anesthetic requirements. Anesth Analg. 1999;89:1346–51.
Kil HK, Kim WO, Chung WY, Kim GH, Seo H, Hong JY. Preoperative anxiety and pain sensitivity are independent predictors of propofol and sevoflurane requirements in general anaesthesia. Br J Anaesth. 2012;108(1):119–25 (Epub 2011 Nov 13).
Van Den Bosch JE, Moons KG, Bonsel GJ, Kalkman CJ. Does measurement of preoperative anxiety have added value for predicting postoperative nausea and vomiting? Anesth Analg. 2005;100:1525–32.
Kalkman CJ, Visser K, Moen J, Bonsel GL, Grobbee DE, Moons KG. Preoperative predictors of severe postoperative pain. Pain. 2003;105:415–23.
Kiecolt-Glaser JK, Page GG, Marucha PT, Maccallum RD, Glaser R. Psychological influences in surgical recovery. Am Psychol. 1998;53:1209–18.
Kindler CH, Harms C, Amsler F, Ihde-Scholl T, Scheidegger D. The visual analog scale allows effective measurement of preoperative anxiety and detection of patients’ anesthetic concerns. Anesth Analg. 2000;90:706–12.
Spielberger CD. Manual for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI). PaloAlto: Consulting Psychologists Press; 1983.
Moerman N, Van Dam FS, Muller MJ, Oosting H. The Amsterdam Preoperative Anxiety and Information Scale (APAIS). Anesth Analg. 1996;82:445–51.
McCleane GJ, Cooper R. The nature of pre-operative anxiety. Anaesthesia. 1990;45(2):153–5.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
About this article
Cite this article
Mavridou, P., Dimitriou, V., Manataki, A. et al. Patient’s anxiety and fear of anesthesia: effect of gender, age, education, and previous experience of anesthesia. A survey of 400 patients. J Anesth 27, 104–108 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00540-012-1460-0
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00540-012-1460-0