Fitzgerald Brian Michael, Elder Jamison
Department of Anesthesiology, Wilford Hall Medical Center, Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, USA.
J Surg Educ. 2008 Sep-Oct;65(5):359-63. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2008.07.013.
The objective of this study was to determine whether an informational handout alone could measurably reduce some of the most common fears patients have about anesthesia and surgery.
An anonymous, volunteer survey package consisting of demographic information, a 1-page informational handout discussing common fears that patients have, and 2 identical surveys that assessed the patients' level of fear before and after reading the handout.
Wilford Hall Medical Center, Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas.
A total of 387 random volunteer patients awaiting their clinic visit with a provider in the Anesthesiology Pre-Operation Clinic of Wilford Hall Medical Center properly filled out the survey package.
Patients were asked to rate their fears with respect to (1) the qualification of their anesthesia providers, and the potential for (2) death or serious illness, (3) awareness, (4) postoperative pain, (5) access to pain medications postoperatively, and (6) postoperative nausea and vomiting. The patients rated their fears for each of the 6 categories using a Likert scale as either none, mild, moderate, or severe, which corresponded to scores of 0, 1, 2, or 3, respectively, for a maximum fear score of 18. The patients were then asked to read a 1-page objective informational handout that addressed each of these potential fears. After reading the informational handout, the patients then repeated the fear survey.
Three hundred eighty-seven patients properly completed the survey packages. There were 160 (41.3%) patients who demonstrated a reduction in fear scores, with a 49.6% (p < 0.001) reduction between the mean initial fear score of 6.81 (CI 6.11 to 7.52) and mean final scores of 3.43 (CI 2.84 to 4.02). The most commonly reported fear was death (n = 196, 50.6%), and those patients with no prior surgeries (n = 63, 17.3%) had the highest initial mean fear score of 5.13 (CI 3.79 to 6.37) and the largest reduction in their fear score with 36.1% (p < 0.001). Those patients between the ages of 26 years old and 39 years old had the high initial mean fear score of 5.39 (CI 4.37 to 6.30), whereas patients under the age of 25 years old had the largest reduction in their fear score with 37.6% (p < 0.001). Subset analysis of patients whose mean fear scores were reduced after reading the handout were found to have statistically significant higher initial mean fear scores and a larger overall reduction in fear scores. Neither initial fear scores nor a reduction in fears scores were found to correlate with the type of surgery a patient was planning to have.
With just over 40% of patients demonstrating a statistically significant reduction in their fear levels, consideration should given to making an informational handout available on a routine basis to patients in preoperative anesthesia and surgical clinics. Additionally, it seems that younger patients (under the age of 40 years old) and those with no prior surgeries are the most likely to benefit from such a handout.
本研究的目的是确定仅一份信息手册是否能显著减轻患者对麻醉和手术的一些最常见恐惧。
一个匿名的志愿者调查问卷包,包括人口统计学信息、一份1页的信息手册,讨论患者常见的恐惧,以及两份相同的调查问卷,用于评估患者在阅读手册前后的恐惧程度。
德克萨斯州圣安东尼奥市拉克兰空军基地威尔福德·霍尔医疗中心。
共有387名随机抽取的志愿者患者在威尔福德·霍尔医疗中心麻醉术前诊所等待与医生门诊时,正确填写了调查问卷包。
要求患者对以下方面的恐惧进行评分:(1)麻醉提供者的资质,以及(2)死亡或重病、(3)术中知晓、(4)术后疼痛、(5)术后获得止痛药物的可能性,以及(6)术后恶心和呕吐。患者使用李克特量表对这6个类别中的每一个的恐惧程度进行评分,分为无、轻度、中度或重度,分别对应0、1、2或3分,最高恐惧评分为18分。然后要求患者阅读一份1页的客观信息手册,该手册针对这些潜在恐惧中的每一个进行了阐述。阅读信息手册后,患者再次进行恐惧调查。
387名患者正确完成了调查问卷包。有160名(41.3%)患者的恐惧评分有所降低,平均初始恐惧评分为6.81(CI 6.11至7.52),平均最终评分为3.43(CI 2.84至4.02),降低了49.6%(p < 0.001)。最常报告的恐惧是死亡(n = 196,50.6%),那些没有既往手术史的患者(n = 63,17.3%)初始平均恐惧评分最高,为5.13(CI 3.79至6.37),恐惧评分降低幅度最大,为36.1%(p < 0.001)。年龄在26岁至39岁之间的患者初始平均恐惧评分较高,为5.39(CI 4.37至6.30),而年龄在25岁以下的患者恐惧评分降低幅度最大,为37.6%(p < 0.001)。对手册阅读后恐惧评分降低的患者进行亚组分析发现,他们的初始平均恐惧评分在统计学上显著更高且恐惧评分总体降低幅度更大。未发现初始恐惧评分或恐惧评分的降低与患者计划进行的手术类型相关。
略多于40%的患者在恐惧水平上有统计学显著降低,应考虑在术前麻醉和手术诊所定期向患者提供信息手册。此外,似乎年轻患者(40岁以下)和那些没有既往手术史的患者最有可能从这样的手册中受益。