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. 2020 Apr 2;5(4):226–240. doi: 10.1302/2058-5241.5.190015

Table 4.

Conclusions about relationship between expectations and satisfaction of included studies.

Author, year Sig. Conclusions Statistics
Anakwe et al, 201112 Yes A significant positive correlation between fulfilment of expectations and overall satisfaction r = .65, p ≤ .001
Arden et al, 201136 No Preoperative expectations did not influence level of satisfaction at 12 months or 24 months post surgery p = .17
p = .96
Bourne et al, 201011 Yes Univariate statistical analysis showed that a significant difference existed between patients with met and unmet expectations in terms of satisfaction OR = 10.7, p ≤ .001
Clement et al, 201540 Yes 16 of 17 met expectations were significantly associated with higher satisfaction OR ≥ 7.9, p ≤ .08
Eisler et al, 200237 Yes Fulfilled expectations about pain and walking ability were moderately positively correlated with satisfaction r = .47
r = .46
Gandhi et al, 200942 No No differences in satisfaction were found between patients with high, moderate or low expectations p = .92
p = .62
p = .28
Hamilton et al, 201310 Yes Meeting patient expectations was significantly positively correlated with higher satisfaction r = .74, p ≤ .001
Jain et al, 201720 Yes Preoperative expectations were positively associated with higher satisfaction at six months b = .17, p ≤.001
Jain et al, 201719 Yes More fulfilment of expectations is related to higher satisfaction r2 = .29, p ≤ .001
Kiran et al, 201538 No Preoperative expectations did not correlate with satisfaction n/a
Lim et al, 201534 Yes At two-year follow-up, met expectations were significantly associated with satisfaction OR = 105.3, p ≤ .001
Lingard et al, 200621 No Satisfaction was not associated with level of preoperative expectations n/a
Mancuso et al, 199733 Yes A strong positive correlation was found between preoperative expectations and satisfaction n/a
Mancuso et al, 200941 Yes Patients who had a favourable response had a greater proportion of expectations fulfilled (90%) in comparison with those who did not have a favourable response (39%) p ≤ .001
Mannion et al, 200924 No Expectations or met expectations did not contribute to the explained variance in satisfaction n/a
Noble et al, 200626 Yes Met expectations was, among five other variables, a significant contributor to satisfaction OR = 6.01, p ≤ .001
Palazzo et al, 201425 Yes Fulfilment of expectations was associated with satisfaction OR = 1.08, p ≤ .001
Scott et al, 201022 Yes Satisfaction correlated significantly with met expectation r = .77
Scott et al, 201232 Yes A significant difference was found between met expectations in terms of satisfaction in THA patients and TKA patients p = .003
p ≤ .001
Gonzalez Saenz de Tejada et al, 201454 Yes High and very high expectations of daily activities were associated with a higher level of satisfaction p = .012
p ≤ .001
Thambiah et al, 201528 Yes Preoperative expectations were significantly associated with higher satisfaction p = .033
Vissers et al, 201035 Yes Fulfilled expectations regarding limitations and overall success of treatment were significantly related to satisfaction (p ≤ .001) OR = 13.6, p ≤ .001
OR = 34.0, p ≤ .001