Halterman J S, Yoos H L, Kitzman H, Anson E, Sidora-Arcoleo K, McMullen A
Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry and the Children's Hospital at Strong, and School of Nursing, University of Rochester, NY, USA. jill_
Arch Dis Child. 2006 Sep;91(9):766-70. doi: 10.1136/adc.2006.096123. Epub 2006 May 16.
One barrier to receiving adequate asthma care is inaccurate estimations of symptom severity.
To interview parents of children with asthma in order to: (1) describe the range of reported illness severity using three unstructured methods of assessment; (2) determine which assessment method is least likely to result in a "critical error" that could adversely influence the child's care; and (3) determine whether the likelihood of making a "critical error" varies by sociodemographic characteristics.
A total of 228 parents of children with asthma participated. Clinical status was evaluated using structured questions reflecting National Asthma Education and Prevention Panel (NAEPP) criteria. Unstructured assessments of severity were determined using a visual analogue scale (VAS), a categorical assessment of severity, and a Likert scale assessment of asthma control. A "critical error" was defined as a parent report of symptoms in the lower 50th centile for each method of assessment for children with moderate-severe persistent symptoms by NAEPP criteria.
Children with higher severity according to NAEPP criteria were rated on each unstructured assessment as more symptomatic compared to those with less severe symptoms. However, among the children with moderate-severe persistent symptoms, many parents made a critical error and rated children in the lower 50th centile using the VAS (41%), the categorical assessment (45%), and the control assessment (67%). The likelihood of parents making a critical error did not vary by sociodemographic characteristics.
All of the unstructured assessment methods tested yielded underestimations of severity that could adversely influence treatment decisions. Specific symptom questions are needed for accurate severity assessments.
获得充分哮喘护理的一个障碍是对症状严重程度的估计不准确。
采访哮喘患儿的家长,以便:(1)使用三种非结构化评估方法描述所报告的疾病严重程度范围;(2)确定哪种评估方法最不可能导致可能对患儿护理产生不利影响的“严重错误”;(3)确定出现“严重错误”的可能性是否因社会人口统计学特征而异。
共有228名哮喘患儿的家长参与。使用反映国家哮喘教育与预防计划(NAEPP)标准的结构化问题评估临床状况。使用视觉模拟量表(VAS)、严重程度分类评估和哮喘控制的李克特量表评估来确定严重程度的非结构化评估。“严重错误”被定义为根据NAEPP标准,对于中度至重度持续性症状患儿,每种评估方法中家长报告的症状处于第50百分位数以下。
根据NAEPP标准,症状较重的患儿在每项非结构化评估中的症状评分均高于症状较轻的患儿。然而,在中度至重度持续性症状的患儿中,许多家长出现了严重错误,使用VAS(41%)、分类评估(45%)和控制评估(67%)将患儿评为第50百分位数以下。家长出现严重错误的可能性不因社会人口统计学特征而异。
所测试的所有非结构化评估方法均导致对严重程度的低估,这可能对治疗决策产生不利影响。需要特定的症状问题来进行准确的严重程度评估。