Objective: Patient- and surrogate-reported outcomes are increasingly recognized as important and historically limited dimensions of satisfaction with medical care. Evaluating caregiver satisfaction for cerebral palsy (CP) patients with pediatric movement disorders (PMDs) remains undefined, limited by a lack of appropriate tools and the heterogeneity of the patient population. The authors identified caregiver satisfaction with the neurosurgical management of PMDs as a key quality metric and report their results across an institutional experience.
Methods: A retrospective single-institution survey study was performed on caregivers of consecutive children who underwent PMD surgery from March 2022 to December 2023. The authors designed a brief 4-question satisfaction survey with dichotomous yes/no answers. The telephone survey solicited answers from primary caregivers, and contact attempts were made 3 times before labeling a nonresponder. Non-English speakers were included. The survey answers were correlated with demographic characteristics, clinical data, and complications. Descriptive statistics were performed using Excel.
Results: Seventy patients were identified in the study period with 50 associated caregivers voluntarily responding to the questionnaire (50/70 [71.4%]). Forty-six male and 24 female patients with a mean (range) age of 13.1 (2-34) years and a follow-up range of 3-20 months were included. All 50 caregivers reported satisfaction with the surgical care their child received: 100% confirmed they would refer others to the program and 94% confirmed that they would have the surgery again in retrospect. Ten caregivers (10/50 [20%]) recalled complications, but only 5 (5/50 [10%]) surgical complications resulted in hospital readmission.
Conclusions: Caregivers were overwhelmingly satisfied with the neurosurgical care for PMDs and would recommend the functional pediatric neurosurgery program to others. A large percentage would again submit to the surgery. There is a perception disparity between caregiver- and hospital-identified complications; it may be beneficial to emphasize expected adverse effects with caregivers prior to surgery. Caregiver satisfaction remains an important quality dimension and future research may benefit from more objective metrics.
Keywords: functional neurosurgery; movement disorders; parent satisfaction; patient-reported outcomes; quality improvement.