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择期手术后住院患者的睡眠模式与质量:一项混合方法研究

Sleep Patterns and Quality Among Inpatients Recovering From Elective Surgery: A Mixed-Method Study.

作者信息

Mouch Charles A, Baskin Alison S, Yearling Ruby, Miller Jacquelyn, Dossett Lesly A

机构信息

Department of Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

出版信息

J Surg Res. 2020 Oct;254:268-274. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2020.04.032. Epub 2020 May 29.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Sleep is necessary for recovery from physiological insults such as surgery. Although previous research has focused on sleep in the intensive care unit and medical setting, little is known about sleep quality among inpatients recovering from elective surgery. Therefore, we examined sleep quality and barriers to sleep among postsurgical inpatients.

METHODS

We conducted an explanatory sequential mixed-method study among adult general-care surgical inpatients who underwent elective surgery. We used a quantitative survey to examine sleep quality and interruptions followed by a qualitative phone interview with a subsample of participants to examine barriers and aids to sleep in the hospital. Results were analyzed using descriptive statistics of survey data and descriptive coding of interview transcripts.

RESULTS

Of 113, 102 (90%) eligible patients completed the survey. Less than half (n = 48, 47%) of patients reported sleeping well the previous night and 93% reported less sleep in the hospital compared with at home. Patients reported a median of 5 (4-7) interruptions each night. Patients with >3 sleep interruptions were more likely to report poor sleep than those with ≤3 interruptions (P < 0.001). Phone interview responses cited barriers to sleep including staff interruptions and roommate noise when sharing a room but not pain. Patients suggested that improved timing and knowledge of interruptions or noise-reduction aids would facilitate sleep.

CONCLUSIONS

Most patients do not sleep well while recovering from elective surgery in the hospital, and most sleep disruptions are modifiable. Minimizing interruptions at night by clustering care, informing patients of scheduled interruptions, and increasing access to noise-reduction aids may improve sleep quality. Optimal efforts to improve sleep quantity and quality will ultimately require a multilevel, multicomponent strategy.

摘要

背景

睡眠对于从手术等生理损伤中恢复是必要的。尽管先前的研究主要关注重症监护病房和医疗环境中的睡眠情况,但对于择期手术后康复的住院患者的睡眠质量知之甚少。因此,我们研究了外科手术后住院患者的睡眠质量及睡眠障碍。

方法

我们对接受择期手术的成年普通外科住院患者进行了一项解释性序列混合方法研究。我们先通过定量调查来检查睡眠质量和睡眠中断情况,随后对部分参与者进行定性电话访谈,以探究住院期间睡眠的障碍和促进因素。使用调查数据的描述性统计和访谈记录的描述性编码对结果进行分析。

结果

113名符合条件的患者中,102名(90%)完成了调查。不到一半(n = 48,47%)的患者报告前一晚睡眠良好,93%的患者表示与在家相比,住院期间睡眠减少。患者报告每晚平均有5次(4 - 7次)睡眠中断。睡眠中断超过3次的患者比中断次数≤3次的患者更有可能报告睡眠不佳(P < 0.001)。电话访谈的回答提到睡眠障碍包括工作人员的打扰以及与他人合住时室友的噪音,但不包括疼痛。患者建议改善打扰的时间安排和告知相关信息,或使用降噪辅助设备将有助于睡眠。

结论

大多数患者在医院接受择期手术康复期间睡眠不佳,且大多数睡眠干扰是可以改善的。通过集中护理减少夜间打扰、告知患者预定的打扰情况以及增加降噪辅助设备的使用,可能会改善睡眠质量。最终,改善睡眠数量和质量的最佳努力需要一个多层次、多组分的策略。

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