Neurosurgery, King's College Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
The University College London Hospital, University of London, London, United Kingdom.
J Voice. 2019 Sep;33(5):691-696. doi: 10.1016/j.jvoice.2018.02.008. Epub 2018 May 9.
Preoperative anxiety has the potential to alter the dynamics of an elective procedure and has been shown to detrimentally affect patients both cognitively and physiologically. If mismanaged, it can lead to essential procedures being postponed or canceled, delay postoperative recovery, and increase patients' requirements for medical intervention postoperatively. These outcomes have harmful implications both clinically and economically. Our primary objective was to evaluate the levels of anxiety patients experience immediately before elective otorhinolaryngologic procedures. Our secondary outcome was to assess the subjects' views on potential management strategies to tackle their anxiety.
This is an observational cross-sectional project evaluating 53 patients who were selected consecutively from a list of elective otorhinolaryngologic procedures. All procedures were to be completed under general anesthetic, and all patients had received the same preoperative assessment preparation. 29 male and 24 female patients were included, aged between 19 and 76 years (mean 45). The Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory was used to assess preoperative anxiety directly before the otorhinolaryngologic procedure. The Service Improvement questionnaire was used to assess whether patients would favor the introduction of anxiety-reduction measures.
There was neither a significant increase in patient anxiety levels preoperatively (P = 0.37) nor a significant increase in anxiety levels preoperatively when results were stratified according to patient gender and age (P = 0.45 and P = 0.27). 54% of the patients felt that their anxiety would have been reduced if they had read a procedural information leaflet, and 22% felt it would have been reduced if they had received preoperative behavioral training. 17% of the patients wanted more information from the surgical team. However, 12% of the patients would have liked less information from the surgical team preoperatively.
Patients did not have a significant increase in their anxiety levels preoperatively. On the basis of our findings, we will work to improve the information we provide to patients preoperatively and to identify patient subgroups that require additional preoperative support.
术前焦虑有可能改变择期手术的动态,并且已经证明它在认知和生理上都会对患者造成不利影响。如果管理不当,可能会导致基本手术被推迟或取消,延迟术后恢复,并增加患者术后对医疗干预的需求。这些结果在临床和经济上都有不良影响。我们的主要目标是评估患者在接受耳鼻喉科择期手术前立即经历的焦虑程度。我们的次要结果是评估患者对潜在管理策略的看法,以解决他们的焦虑问题。
这是一项观察性横断面研究,评估了 53 名连续从耳鼻喉科择期手术名单中选出的患者。所有手术均在全身麻醉下进行,所有患者均接受了相同的术前评估准备。29 名男性和 24 名女性患者,年龄 19-76 岁(平均 45 岁)。使用 Spielberger 状态-特质焦虑量表直接评估术前焦虑。使用服务改进问卷评估患者是否赞成引入减轻焦虑的措施。
患者术前焦虑水平既没有显著增加(P=0.37),也没有根据患者性别和年龄分层时术前焦虑水平显著增加(P=0.45 和 P=0.27)。54%的患者认为如果阅读了程序信息传单,他们的焦虑会减轻,如果接受了术前行为训练,他们的焦虑会减轻 22%。17%的患者希望从手术团队获得更多信息。然而,12%的患者希望在术前从手术团队获得较少的信息。
患者术前焦虑水平没有显著增加。基于我们的发现,我们将努力改善我们在术前向患者提供的信息,并确定需要额外术前支持的患者亚组。