针对患有慢性病的儿童和青少年家长的心理干预措施。

Psychological interventions for parents of children and adolescents with chronic illness.

作者信息

Eccleston Christopher, Fisher Emma, Law Emily, Bartlett Jess, Palermo Tonya M

机构信息

Centre for Pain Research, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath, UK, BA2 7AY.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Apr 15;4(4):CD009660. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009660.pub3.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Psychological therapies have been developed for parents of children and adolescents with a chronic illness. Such therapies include interventions directed at the parent only or at parent and child/adolescent, and are designed to improve parent, child, and family outcomes. This is an updated version of the original Cochrane review published in Issue 8, 2012, (Psychological interventions for parents of children and adolescents with chronic illness).

OBJECTIVES

To evaluate the efficacy of psychological therapies that include parents of children and adolescents with chronic illnesses including painful conditions, cancer, diabetes mellitus, asthma, traumatic brain injury (TBI), inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), skin diseases, or gynaecological disorders. We also aimed to evaluate the adverse events related to implementation of psychological therapies for this population. Secondly, we aimed to evaluate the risk of bias of included studies and the quality of outcomes using the GRADE assessment.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, EMBASE and PsycINFO for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of psychological interventions that included parents of children and adolescents with a chronic illness. Databases were searched to July 2014.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Included studies were RCTs of psychological interventions that delivered treatment to parents of children and adolescents with a chronic illness compared to an active control, waiting list, or treatment as usual control group.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Study characteristics and outcomes were extracted from included studies. We analysed data using two categories. First, we analysed data by each individual medical condition collapsing across all treatment classes at two time points. Second, we analysed data by each individual treatment class; cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), family therapy (FT), problem solving therapy (PST) and multisystemic therapy (MST) collapsing across all medical conditions. For both sets of analyses we looked immediately post-treatment and at the first available follow-up. We assessed treatment effectiveness for two primary outcomes: parent behaviour and parent mental health. Five secondary outcomes were extracted; child behaviour/disability, child mental health, child symptoms, family functioning, and adverse events. Risk of bias and quality of evidence were assessed.

MAIN RESULTS

Thirteen studies were added in this update, giving a total of 47 RCTs. The total number of participants included in the data analyses was 2985, 804 of whom were added to the analyses in the update. The mean age of the children was 14.6 years. Of the 47 RCTs, the studies focused on the following paediatric conditions: n = 14 painful conditions, n = 13 diabetes, n =10 cancer, n = 5 asthma, n = 4 TBI, and n = 1 atopic eczema. We did not identify any studies treating parents of children with gynaecological disorders or IBD. Risk of bias assessments of included studies were predominantly unclear. Evidence quality, assessed using the GRADE criteria, was judged to be of low or very low quality.Analyses of separate medical conditions, across all treatment types, revealed two beneficial effects of psychological therapies for our primary outcomes. First, psychological therapies led to improved adaptive parenting behaviour in parents of children with cancer post-treatment (standardised mean difference (SMD) -0.20, 95% confidence interval (CI) -0.36 to -0.04, Z = 2.44, p = 0.01). In addition, therapies also improved parent mental health at follow-up in this group (SMD = -0.18, 95% CI -0.32 to -0.04, Z = 2.58, p = 0.01). We did not find any effect of therapies for parent behaviour for parents of children with a painful condition post-treatment or at follow-up, or for parent mental health for parents of children with cancer, diabetes, asthma, or TBI post-treatment. For all other primary outcomes, no analysis could be conducted due to lack of data.Across all medical conditions, three effects were found for the primary outcomes of psychological therapies. PST had a beneficial effect on parent adaptive behaviour (SMD = -0.25, 95% CI -0.39 to -0.11, Z = 3.59, p < 0.01) and parent mental health (SMD= -0.24, 95% CI -0.42 to -0.05, Z = 2.50, p = 0.01) immediately post-treatment and this effect was maintained at follow-up for parent mental health (SMD= -0.19, 95% CI -0.34 to -0.04, Z = 2.55, p = 0.01). The remaining analysis for PST on parent behaviour found no effect. No effects were found for CBT post-treatment or at follow-up for either parent outcome. For FT, only one analysis could be run on parent mental health and no effect was found. Due to lack of data, the remaining analyses of primary outcomes could not be run. For MST, no parent outcomes could be analysed due to lack of data.Secondary outcome analyses are presented in the Results section. Five studies reported that there were no adverse events during the trial. The remaining 42 studies did not report adverse events.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This update includes 13 additional studies, although our conclusions have not changed from the original version. There is little evidence for the efficacy of psychological therapies that include parents on most outcome domains of functioning, for a large number of common chronic illnesses in children. However, psychological therapies are efficacious for some outcomes. CBT that includes parents is beneficial for reducing children's primary symptoms, and PST that includes parents improved parent adaptive behaviour and parent mental health. There is evidence that the beneficial effects can be maintained at follow-up for diabetes-related symptoms in children, and for the mental health of parents of children with cancer and parents who received PST.

摘要

背景

针对患有慢性病的儿童和青少年的父母,已经开发出了心理疗法。此类疗法包括仅针对父母或针对父母与儿童/青少年的干预措施,旨在改善父母、儿童和家庭的状况。这是2012年第8期发表的原始Cochrane系统评价(针对患有慢性病的儿童和青少年父母的心理干预)的更新版本。

目的

评估心理疗法对患有慢性病(包括疼痛性疾病、癌症、糖尿病、哮喘、创伤性脑损伤(TBI)、炎症性肠病(IBD)、皮肤病或妇科疾病)的儿童和青少年的父母的疗效。我们还旨在评估针对该人群实施心理疗法相关的不良事件。其次,我们旨在使用GRADE评估来评估纳入研究的偏倚风险和结果质量。

检索方法

我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、EMBASE和PsycINFO,以查找针对患有慢性病的儿童和青少年的父母的心理干预随机对照试验(RCT)。检索数据库至2014年7月。

选择标准

纳入研究为心理干预的RCT,将针对患有慢性病的儿童和青少年的父母的治疗与积极对照、等候名单或常规治疗对照组进行比较。

数据收集与分析

从纳入研究中提取研究特征和结果。我们使用两类进行数据分析。首先,我们在两个时间点按所有治疗类别汇总的每种个体医疗状况分析数据。其次,我们按每种个体治疗类别分析数据;认知行为疗法(CBT)、家庭疗法(FT)、解决问题疗法(PST)和多系统疗法(MST)按所有医疗状况汇总。对于这两组分析,我们在治疗后立即和首次可得的随访时进行观察。我们评估了两个主要结局的治疗效果:父母行为和父母心理健康。提取了五个次要结局;儿童行为/残疾、儿童心理健康、儿童症状、家庭功能和不良事件。评估了偏倚风险和证据质量。

主要结果

本次更新增加了13项研究,共47项RCT。纳入数据分析的参与者总数为2985人,其中804人是在本次更新中新增纳入分析的。儿童的平均年龄为14.6岁。在47项RCT中,研究聚焦于以下儿科疾病:n = 14项疼痛性疾病,n = 13项糖尿病,n = 10项癌症。n = 5项哮喘,n = 4项TBI,n = 1项特应性皮炎。我们未找到任何针对患有妇科疾病或IBD的儿童的父母的治疗研究。纳入研究的偏倚风险评估大多不明确。使用GRADE标准评估的证据质量被判定为低质量或极低质量。对所有治疗类型的单独医疗状况分析显示,心理疗法对于我们的主要结局有两个有益效果。首先,心理疗法使癌症患儿的父母在治疗后适应性养育行为得到改善(标准化均数差(SMD)-0.20,95%置信区间(CI)-0.36至-0.04,Z = 2.44,p = 0.01)。此外,该疗法在随访时也改善了该组父母的心理健康(SMD = -0.18,95% CI -0.32至-0.04,Z = 2.58,p = 0.01)。我们未发现心理疗法对患有疼痛性疾病的儿童的父母在治疗后或随访时的父母行为有任何影响,也未发现对患有癌症、糖尿病、哮喘或TBI的儿童的父母在治疗后的父母心理健康有任何影响。对于所有其他主要结局,由于缺乏数据无法进行分析。在所有医疗状况中,心理疗法的主要结局发现了三个效果。PST对父母适应性行为(SMD = -0.25,95% CI -0.39至-0.11,Z = 3.59,p < 0.01)和父母心理健康(SMD = -0.24,95% CI -0.42至-0.05,Z = 2.50,p = \alpha)在治疗后立即有有益效果,且该效果在随访时对父母心理健康得以维持(SMD = -0.19,95% CI -0.34至-0.04,Z = 2.55,p = \alpha)。对PST关于父母行为的其余分析未发现效果。CBT在治疗后或随访时对任何一项父母结局均未发现效果。对于FT,仅对父母心理健康进行了一项分析,未发现效果。由于缺乏数据,无法对主要结局进行其余分析。对于MST,由于缺乏数据无法分析任何父母结局。

次要结局分析在结果部分呈现。五项研究报告称试验期间未发生不良事件。其余42项研究未报告不良事件。

作者结论

本次更新增加了13项研究,尽管我们的结论与原始版本没有变化。对于大量儿童常见慢性病,几乎没有证据表明包括父母参与的心理疗法在大多数功能结局领域有效。然而,心理疗法在某些结局方面是有效的。包括父母参与的CBT有助于减轻儿童的主要症状,包括父母参与的PST改善了父母的适应性行为和父母心理健康。有证据表明,对于儿童与糖尿病相关的症状以及癌症患儿的父母和接受PST的父母的心理健康,有益效果在随访时得以维持。

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