Objective: To determine the surgeons' and the surgical residents' choice for inguinal hernia repair. Design: A questionnaire study. Subjects: One hundred and forty two respondents who work in surgical clinics as surgeons or residents. Setting: University hospitals and non-academic teaching hospitals in Ankara, Turkey. Main outcome measure: The preference rates of open and laparoscopic hernia repairs for respondents' own inguinal hernias: "If you had an inguinal hernia, how would you prefer to have it repaired?" Results: Only 14.1% of the respondents preferred a laparoscopic hernia repair. Eight of 63 residents (12.7%) and 12 of 79 surgeons (15.2%) chose laparoscopic technique for their own hernia (p=0.67). Personal laparoscopic herniorrhaphy experience significantly affected the choice. Among 118 respondents who had performed no laparoscopic hernia repair, only 12 (10.2%) preferred laparoscopic technique for their own inguinal hernias, whereas the preference rate rose to 33.3% in other 24 participants who had previously done laparoscopic hernia repair (p=0.03). The only independent variable in multivariate analysis was personal experience on laparoscopic herniorrhaphy (SE:0.33, Wald 11.73, Sig:0.0006). The majority of the respondents who preferred open hernia repair stated that it was a better known technique. Other common reasons for open repair were being better repair and the advantage of local anesthesia. Top three reasons for choosing laparoscopic hernia repair were less pain, short hospital stay and early return to normal activity. Conclusion: Majority of surgeons and residents still prefer open hernia repair.
CITATION STYLE
Kulaçoglu, H. I., Özmen, M. M., Oruç, M. T., Koç, M., & Kama, N. A. (2001). Laparoscopic herniorrhaphy: Preference rate among surgeons in Ankara, Turkey. East African Medical Journal, 78(4), 216–219. https://doi.org/10.4314/eamj.v78i4.9067
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