Cohen Emma, Botti Mari
Author Affiliations: Epworth/Deakin Centre for Clinical Nursing Research, Melbourne; and School of Nursing and Midwifery, Deakin University, Victoria, Australia.
Cancer Nurs. 2015 Nov-Dec;38(6):458-65. doi: 10.1097/NCC.0000000000000226.
Symptoms by definition are subjective, and patients' role in their assessment and management will impact on patient outcomes; thus, symptom management is an area of acute care practice where facilitation of patient participation is vital if quality outcomes are to be achieved.
This study originated from a large multimethod research program exploring patient participation in symptom management in an acute oncology setting. The purpose of this article is to explore patients' perceptions of the barriers and facilitators to participating in their symptom management during an episode of admission to an acute oncology ward and the relationships between these perceptions and patients' preference for participation.
One hundred seventy-one cancer inpatients consented and completed an interview-administered questionnaire. Patients' preference for participation was measured using the Control Preference Scale. Responses to open-ended survey questions were evaluated using content analysis.
Ten categories were identified in the analyses of patient perceptions of the barriers and facilitators to participating in care decisions relating to their symptoms. Patients, irrespective of their Control Preference, reported multiple barriers and facilitators to participating in their symptom management.
Patients overall perceived information as the most critical component of participation. Irrespective of patients' preference for participation, there were similarities in the barriers and facilitators to the operationalization of participation in the acute care setting reported.
Understanding patient perceptions of barriers and facilitators of participating in symptom management has provided important insights into person and system factors in the acute care sector impacting quality patient symptom outcomes.
根据定义,症状是主观的,患者在症状评估和管理中的作用会影响患者的治疗结果;因此,症状管理是急性护理实践的一个领域,如果要实现高质量的治疗结果,促进患者参与至关重要。
本研究源于一个大型多方法研究项目,该项目探索急性肿瘤护理环境中患者对症状管理的参与情况。本文的目的是探讨患者在入住急性肿瘤病房期间对参与症状管理的障碍和促进因素的看法,以及这些看法与患者参与偏好之间的关系。
171名癌症住院患者同意并完成了一份通过访谈进行的问卷调查。使用控制偏好量表测量患者的参与偏好。对开放式调查问题的回答采用内容分析法进行评估。
在对患者参与与其症状相关护理决策的障碍和促进因素的看法分析中,确定了10个类别。无论控制偏好如何,患者都报告了参与症状管理的多种障碍和促进因素。
患者总体上认为信息是参与的最关键组成部分。无论患者对参与的偏好如何,在报告的急性护理环境中参与实施的障碍和促进因素方面存在相似之处。
了解患者对参与症状管理的障碍和促进因素的看法,为影响患者症状治疗质量的急性护理部门的个人和系统因素提供了重要见解。