Chi Kevin W, Coon Eric R, Destino Lauren, Schroeder Alan R
Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford and School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California; and
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Utah and Primary Children's Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Pediatrics. 2020 Aug;146(2). doi: 10.1542/peds.2020-0130. Epub 2020 Jul 16.
Because of the impact of continuous pulse oximetry (CPOX) on the overdiagnosis of hypoxemia in bronchiolitis, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Choosing Wisely campaign have issued recommendations for intermittent monitoring. Parental preferences for monitoring may impact adoption of these recommendations, but these perspectives are poorly understood.
Using this cross-sectional survey, we explored parental perspectives on CPOX monitoring before discharge and 1 week after bronchiolitis hospitalizations. During the 1-week call, half of the participants were randomly assigned to receive a verbal statement on the potential harms of CPOX to determine if conveying the concept of overdiagnosis can change parental preferences on monitoring frequency. An aggregate variable measuring favorable perceptions of CPOX was created to determine CPOX affinity predictors.
In-hospital interviews were completed on 357 patients, of which 306 (86%) completed the 1-week follow-up. Although 25% of parents agreed or strongly agreed that hospital monitors made them feel anxious, 98% agreed that the monitors were helpful. Compared to other vital signs, respiratory rate (87%) and oxygen saturation (84%) were commonly rated as "extremely important." Providing an educational statement on CPOX comparatively decreased parental desire for continuous monitoring (40% vs 20%; < .001). Although there were no significant predictors of CPOX affinity, the effect size of the educational intervention was higher in college-educated parents.
Parents find security in CPOX. A brief statement on the potential harms of CPOX use had an impact on stated monitoring preferences. Parental perspectives are important to consider because they may influence the adoption of intermittent monitoring.
由于持续脉搏血氧饱和度监测(CPOX)对细支气管炎低氧血症过度诊断的影响,美国儿科学会和明智选择运动已发布间歇性监测的建议。父母对监测的偏好可能会影响这些建议的采纳,但对这些观点了解甚少。
通过这项横断面调查,我们探讨了父母对细支气管炎住院出院前和出院后1周CPOX监测的看法。在1周的随访电话中,一半的参与者被随机分配接受关于CPOX潜在危害的口头陈述,以确定传达过度诊断的概念是否会改变父母对监测频率的偏好。创建了一个衡量对CPOX有利看法的综合变量,以确定CPOX亲和力预测因素。
对357名患者进行了院内访谈,其中306名(86%)完成了1周的随访。虽然25%的父母同意或强烈同意医院的监测让他们感到焦虑,但98%的父母同意监测是有帮助的。与其他生命体征相比,呼吸频率(87%)和血氧饱和度(84%)通常被评为“极其重要”。提供关于CPOX的教育陈述相对降低了父母对持续监测的渴望(40%对20%;P<0.001)。虽然没有CPOX亲和力的显著预测因素,但教育干预对受过大学教育的父母的效应量更高。
父母从CPOX中找到安全感。关于使用CPOX潜在危害的简短陈述对既定的监测偏好产生了影响。父母的观点很重要,因为它们可能会影响间歇性监测的采用。