Easterlin Molly C, Berdahl Carl T, Rabizadeh Shervin, Spiegel Brennan, Agoratus Lauren, Hoover Clarissa, Dudovitz Rebecca
UCLA National Clinician Scholars Program.
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2020 Jul;71(1):e16-e27. doi: 10.1097/MPG.0000000000002693.
Children with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are at increased risk for poor mental health. The etiology of this risk is not clear, though may be related to the disease, its treatment, and/or the experience of these. We sought to describe the challenges that children with IBD and their families face in living with a chronic condition and undergoing repeated intravenous infusions; and identify coping mechanisms to understand how medical systems may support resilience.
Semistructured qualitative interviews with 18 patient-guardian dyads at a tertiary outpatient infusion center, explored feelings related to IBD, the infusion process, and coping. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed in ATLAS.ti. Two coders identified themes; developed a codebook and coded transcripts using the constant comparative method; and described themes/patterns.
Participants identified challenges related to IBD (unpredictable nature, disrupted normalcy, treatment decisions, managing relationships, life transitions) and a subset of challenges related to the infusion procedure (anxiety of unknown, managing pain/anxiety during IV placement, logistics). Participants coped through social support, cognitive strategies (positive attitude) and/or behavioral strategies for managing emotions (preparation for intravenous [IV] placement), and confidence in the medical care. By employing these coping strategies, participants came to accept IBD, adapt to the "new norm," and learned life lessons and resilience.
To support coping, clinical teams might provide anticipatory guidance to decrease anxiety of the unknown and identify cognitive-behavioral strategies for managing emotions. Delivery systems that build relationships, maintain normalcy, and consider needs of the family may further facilitate coping.
炎症性肠病(IBD)患儿心理健康状况不佳的风险增加。这种风险的病因尚不清楚,不过可能与疾病本身、其治疗方法和/或这些经历有关。我们试图描述IBD患儿及其家庭在患有慢性病并接受反复静脉输注时所面临的挑战;并确定应对机制,以了解医疗系统如何支持恢复力。
在一家三级门诊输液中心对18对患者-监护人进行半结构化定性访谈,探讨与IBD、输液过程和应对相关的感受。访谈进行录音、转录,并在ATLAS.ti中进行分析。两名编码员确定主题;制定编码手册并使用持续比较法对转录本进行编码;并描述主题/模式。
参与者确定了与IBD相关的挑战(不可预测性、正常生活被打乱、治疗决策、人际关系管理、生活转变)以及与输液程序相关的一部分挑战(对未知的焦虑、静脉穿刺过程中应对疼痛/焦虑、后勤保障)。参与者通过社会支持、认知策略(积极态度)和/或管理情绪的行为策略(为静脉穿刺做准备)以及对医疗护理的信心来应对。通过采用这些应对策略,参与者逐渐接受IBD,适应“新常态”,并汲取了生活经验和恢复力。
为了支持应对,临床团队可以提供预期指导,以减少对未知的焦虑,并确定管理情绪的认知行为策略。建立人际关系、维持正常生活并考虑家庭需求的输送系统可能会进一步促进应对。