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急性卒中和普通医学中自由水方案患者适用性:临床医生认知的定性研究。

Patient suitability for free water protocols in acute stroke and general medicine: a qualitative study of clinician perceptions.

机构信息

Caring Futures Institute, College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA, Australia.

Swallowing Neurorehabilitation Research Laboratory, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA, Australia.

出版信息

Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2022 May;57(3):630-644. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12713. Epub 2022 Mar 23.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The free water protocol (FWP) is an alternate management strategy for patients with dysphagia, who would otherwise be nil by mouth or prescribed thickened fluids, allowing them to drink and potentially aspirate water under strict guidelines to minimize the risk of adverse consequences. The FWP is not widely implemented in acute settings, and it is unclear whether this is due to the complexity of patient presentations, clinician decision-making or barriers related to the setting.

AIMS

To explore the perceptions and decision-making process of clinicians about using FWPs to manage dysphagia for patients admitted to acute stroke and general medicine.

METHODS & PROCEDURES: A qualitative, critical realist approach was adopted to allow for in-depth exploration of the perspectives of four dietitians, seven medical officers, eight registered nurses and 17 speech and language pathologists (SLPs) from three hospitals in a capital city of Australia. Data from semi-structured interviews were analysed using the Situated Clinical Decision-Making Framework (CDF).

OUTCOMES & RESULTS: Participants were cautious about FWP for patients with neurological conditions, head and neck cancer, dementia, poor immunity, chronic or recurrent respiratory illness, and certain types of stroke. Medical status and the implications for aspiration were paramount, particularly respiratory status, oxygen supplementation, cognitive status, fatigue and mobility. Participants considered patient quality of life, preferences and choices for care, but indicated that factors influencing safety often outweighed patient preference for water. Indirect factors affecting decision-making included the roles of the multidisciplinary team, individual clinical experience and attitude to risk, and availability of supervision.

CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: Despite the benefits of FWPs in other settings, in acute stroke and general medicine, clinicians erred on the side of safety and, in most cases, would not implement an FWP. Future clinical research is needed to systematically design high-quality and feasible clinical trials to determine the benefits and safety of FWPs for patients with dysphagia in these settings. This would lay the foundations for guidelines to support the complex clinical decision-making regarding patient suitability for FWPs.

WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS

What is already known on the subject FWPs are an alternate management strategy for patients with dysphagia, with systematic reviews recommending their use for adults in inpatient rehabilitation with a low risk of pneumonia. However, evidence from the acute setting is sparse, leaving clinicians unsure about which patients might benefit and which may inadvertently be exposed to increased risk by an FWP. What this paper adds to existing knowledge Participants from all interviewed disciplines agreed that SLPs lead the decision-making process and as such act as 'gatekeepers' for access to an FWP. The decision-making process is complex, and participants acknowledged that disease conditions and illnesses were often used as exclusionary criteria. Although participants reported favourably on the benefits of FWPs, their decision-making privileged risk aversion over patient preference in most settings, except for palliative care. Lack of clinical guidelines and research evidence in acute care settings, as well as the focus on risk aversion, appear to perpetually reinforce the avoidance of FWP in these settings. Of note, more senior clinicians acknowledged being more deliberately guided by patient preference; hence, leadership by senior clinicians appears critical for change in practice in this space. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? If evidence about the safety of FWP in the acute settings is to be collected, a systematic approach to addressing the present barriers is warranted. This may allow rigorous clinical trials to proceed and potentially lead to best-practice guidelines for dysphagia management options for wider populations of patients.

摘要

背景

对于有吞咽困难的患者,自由水协议(FWP)是一种替代管理策略,否则这些患者将被禁食或给予增稠液体,允许他们在严格的指导下饮水,并可能会误吸,但这会增加不良后果的风险。FWP 在急性环境中并未得到广泛实施,目前尚不清楚这是由于患者表现复杂、临床医生决策还是与环境相关的障碍所致。

目的

探讨临床医生对使用 FWP 管理急性卒中和普通内科患者吞咽困难的看法和决策过程。

方法和程序

采用定性、批判现实主义方法,对来自澳大利亚首府的三家医院的四名营养师、七名内科医生、八名注册护士和 17 名言语治疗师(SLP)进行了深入探讨。使用情境临床决策框架(CDF)对半结构式访谈数据进行分析。

结果和结论

参与者对有神经状况、头颈部癌症、痴呆、免疫力低下、慢性或复发性呼吸道疾病以及某些类型的卒中的患者使用 FWP 持谨慎态度。医疗状况和对吸入的影响至关重要,尤其是呼吸状况、氧补充、认知状态、疲劳和活动能力。参与者考虑了患者的生活质量、对护理的偏好和选择,但表示影响安全性的因素往往超过了患者对水的偏好。影响决策的间接因素包括多学科团队的角色、个人临床经验和风险态度,以及监督的可用性。

尽管 FWP 在其他环境中有好处,但在急性卒中和普通内科中,临床医生在大多数情况下会选择安全,而不会实施 FWP。需要进行未来的临床研究,以系统地设计高质量和可行的临床试验,以确定 FWP 对这些环境中吞咽困难患者的益处和安全性。这将为支持患者适合使用 FWP 的复杂临床决策制定指南奠定基础。

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