Chotai Pranit N, Nollan Richard, Huang Eunice Y, Gosain Ankush
Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, Memphis, Tennessee.
Preston Smith Library of the Health Sciences, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Lubbock, Texas.
J Surg Res. 2017 Jun 1;213:191-198. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2017.02.047. Epub 2017 Mar 3.
The purpose of the article was to analyze current literature on surgeon and parents' understanding and role in the informed consent process for children undergoing surgery.
A systematic database search (MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, and EBM Reviews) was performed to identify articles concerning any aspect of the surgical informed consent for children undergoing an invasive procedure. Articles analyzing informed consent in research studies, non-English-language articles, review articles, case reports and/or series, letters-commentaries, and dentistry and/or nursing-related articles were excluded. Articles meeting inclusion criteria were analyzed to identify common themes related to the process of informed consent.
One hundred seventy-eight articles were identified on primary search, after removing duplicates and screening titles for relevance, 83 abstracts were reviewed. Thirty-two additional abstracts were identified by secondary search. Twelve of 115 articles met inclusion criteria. Analysis identified five different study themes. Information delivered during consent (Content) was studied in five articles (42%), three (25%) studied the mechanics or delivery of the information (Delivery), three (25%) studied parent participation and discussion (Interchange), six articles (50%) discussed surgeons' perceptions or the parents' ability to understand or recall the information (Comprehension), and five articles (42%) evaluated surgeon or parent satisfaction or anxiety (Satisfaction). None of the articles studied all five categories.
Studies of the surgical informed consent process in children are scarce. Prospective studies evaluating surgeon and parent perception regarding the Content, Delivery, and Interchange of information as well as Comprehension and Satisfaction are needed to understand barriers to the surgeon-patient relationship and to optimize the informed consent process in children undergoing surgery.
本文旨在分析当前关于外科医生和家长在儿童手术知情同意过程中的理解及作用的文献。
进行系统的数据库检索(MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsycINFO和循证医学综述),以识别有关接受侵入性手术的儿童的外科知情同意任何方面的文章。排除分析研究性知情同意、非英文文章、综述文章、病例报告和/或系列、信函评论以及牙科和/或护理相关文章。对符合纳入标准的文章进行分析,以确定与知情同意过程相关的共同主题。
在初步检索中识别出178篇文章,去除重复项并筛选标题相关性后,审查了83篇摘要。通过二次检索又识别出32篇摘要。115篇文章中有12篇符合纳入标准。分析确定了五个不同的研究主题。五篇文章(42%)研究了同意过程中提供的信息(内容),三篇(25%)研究了信息的传递方式或机制(传递),三篇(25%)研究了家长的参与和讨论(交流),六篇文章(50%)讨论了外科医生的看法或家长理解或回忆信息的能力(理解),五篇文章(42%)评估了外科医生或家长的满意度或焦虑(满意度)。没有文章研究所有这五个类别。
关于儿童外科知情同意过程的研究很少。需要进行前瞻性研究,评估外科医生和家长对信息的内容、传递和交流以及理解和满意度的看法,以了解医患关系的障碍,并优化接受手术儿童的知情同意过程。