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骨科医生如何理解急性损伤后的良好患者结局及其障碍和促进因素?一项定性研究。

How Do Orthopaedic Providers Conceptualize Good Patient Outcomes and Their Barriers and Facilitators After Acute Injury? A Qualitative Study.

机构信息

Center for Health Outcomes and Interdisciplinary Research, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.

Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

出版信息

Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2023 Jun 1;481(6):1088-1100. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000002473. Epub 2022 Nov 8.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Good clinical outcomes in orthopaedics are largely dictated by the biomedical model, despite mounting evidence of the role of psychosocial factors. Understanding orthopaedic providers' conceptualizations of good clinical outcomes and what facilitates and hinders them may highlight critical barriers and opportunities for training providers on biopsychosocial models of care and integrating them into practice.

QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) How do orthopaedic trauma healthcare providers define good clinical outcomes for their patients after an acute orthopaedic injury? (2) What do providers perceive as barriers to good outcomes? (3) What do providers perceive as facilitators of good outcomes? For each question, we explored providers' responses in a biopsychosocial framework.

METHODS

In this cross-sectional, qualitative study, we recruited 94 orthopaedic providers via an electronic screening survey from three Level I trauma centers in geographically diverse regions of the United States (rural southeastern, urban southwestern, and urban northeastern). This study was part of the first phase of a multisite trial testing the implementation of a behavioral intervention to prevent chronic pain after acute orthopaedic injury. Of the 94 participants who were recruited, 88 completed the screening questionnaire. Of the 88 who completed it, nine could not participate because of scheduling conflicts. Thus, the final sample included 79 participants: 48 surgeons (20 attendings, 28 residents; 6% [three of 48] were women, 94% [45 of 48] were between 25 and 55 years old, 73% [35 of 48] were White, and 2% [one of 48] were Hispanic) and 31 other orthopaedic professionals (10 nurse practitioners, registered nurses, and physician assistants; 13 medical assistants; five physical therapists and social workers; and three research fellows; 68% [21 of 31] were women, 97% [30 of 31] were between 25 and 55 years old, 71% [22 of 31] were White, and 39% [12 of 31] were Hispanic). Using a semistructured interview, our team of psychology researchers conducted focus groups, organized by provider type at each site, followed by individual exit interviews (5- to 10-minute debriefing conversations and opportunities to voice additional opinions one-on-one with a focus group facilitator). In each focus group, providers were asked to share their perceptions of what constitutes a "good outcome for your patients," what factors facilitate these outcomes, and what factors are barriers to achieving those outcomes. Focus groups were approximately 60 minutes long. A research assistant recorded field notes during the focus groups to summarize insights gained and disseminate findings to the broader research team. Using this procedure, we determined that thematic saturation was reached for all topics and no additional focus groups were necessary. Three independent coders identified the codes of good outcomes, outcome barriers, and outcome facilitators and applied this coding framework to all transcripts. Three separate data interpreters collaboratively extracted themes related to biomedical, psychological, and social factors and corresponding inductive subthemes.

RESULTS

Although orthopaedic providers' definitions of good outcomes naturally included biomedical factors (bone healing, functional independence, and pain alleviation), they were also marked by nuanced psychosocial factors, including the need for patients to recover from psychological trauma associated with injury and feel heard and understood-not just as outcome facilitators, but also as key outcomes themselves. Regarding perceived barriers to good outcomes, providers interwove psychological and biomedical factors (for example, "if they're a smoker, if they have depression, anxiety…") and discussed how psychological dysfunction (for example, maladaptive avoidance or fear of reinjury) can limit key behaviors during recovery (such as adherence to physical therapy regimens). Unprimed, providers also cited resiliency-related terms from psychological research, including (low) "self-efficacy," "catastrophic thinking," and (lack of) psychological "hardiness" as barriers. Regarding perceived facilitators of good outcomes, various social and socioeconomic factors emerged, including a biosocial connection between recovery, social support, and "privilege" (such as occupation or education). These perspectives emerged across sites and provider types.

CONCLUSION

Although the biomedical model prevails in clinical practice, providers across all sites, in various roles, defined good outcomes and their barriers and facilitators in terms of interconnected biopsychosocial factors without direct priming to do so. Thus, similar Level I trauma centers may be more ready to adopt biopsychosocial care approaches than initially expected.

CLINICAL RELEVANCE

Providers' perspectives in this study aligned with a growing body of research on the role of biomedical and psychosocial factors in surgical outcomes and risk of transition to chronic pain. To translate these affirming attitudes into practice, other Level I trauma centers could encourage leaders who adopt biopsychosocial approaches to share their perspectives and train other providers in biopsychosocial conceptualization and treatment.

摘要

背景

尽管有越来越多的证据表明心理社会因素的作用,但骨科的良好临床结果在很大程度上取决于生物医学模式。了解骨科提供者对良好临床结果的概念化,以及什么因素促进和阻碍良好结果,可能会突出培训提供者对生物心理社会护理模式的关键障碍和机会,并将这些模式整合到实践中。

问题/目的:(1)急性骨科损伤后,骨科创伤医护人员如何定义患者的良好临床结果?(2)提供者认为哪些是良好结果的障碍?(3)提供者认为哪些是良好结果的促进因素?对于每个问题,我们都在生物心理社会框架内探讨了提供者的反应。

方法

在这项横断面、定性研究中,我们通过来自美国三个地理位置不同的一级创伤中心(农村东南部、城市西南部和城市东北部)的电子筛选调查招募了 94 名骨科提供者。这项研究是一项多地点试验的第一阶段,该试验测试了实施行为干预以预防急性骨科损伤后慢性疼痛的效果。在 94 名参与者中,有 88 名完成了筛选问卷。在完成问卷的 88 人中,有 9 人由于日程安排冲突无法参加。因此,最终样本包括 79 名参与者:48 名外科医生(20 名主治医生,28 名住院医生;6%[3/48]为女性,94%[45/48]年龄在 25 岁至 55 岁之间,73%[35/48]为白人,2%[1/48]为西班牙裔)和 31 名其他骨科专业人员(10 名执业护士、注册护士和医生助理;13 名医疗助理;5 名物理治疗师和社会工作者;和 3 名研究研究员;68%[21/31]为女性,97%[30/31]年龄在 25 岁至 55 岁之间,71%[22/31]为白人,39%[12/31]为西班牙裔)。我们的心理学研究人员团队使用半结构式访谈,在每个地点按提供者类型组织焦点小组,然后进行单独的退出访谈(5-10 分钟的汇报对话和与焦点小组主持人一对一表达其他意见的机会)。在每个焦点小组中,要求提供者分享他们对“患者良好结果”的看法,哪些因素促进了这些结果,以及哪些因素是实现这些结果的障碍。焦点小组大约持续 60 分钟。一名研究助理在焦点小组期间记录现场笔记,以总结获得的见解并将研究结果传播给更广泛的研究团队。使用该程序,我们确定所有主题的主题饱和度均已达到,并且无需进行额外的焦点小组。三位独立的编码员确定了良好结果、结果障碍和结果促进因素的代码,并将该编码框架应用于所有转录本。三位独立的数据解释员合作提取了与生物医学、心理和社会因素相关的主题以及相应的归纳子主题。

结果

尽管骨科提供者对良好结果的定义自然包括生物医学因素(骨骼愈合、功能独立性和疼痛缓解),但他们的定义也以微妙的心理社会因素为标志,包括患者从与损伤相关的心理创伤中恢复的需要,并感到被听到和理解——不仅作为结果促进因素,而且作为关键结果本身。关于良好结果的障碍,提供者交织了心理和生物医学因素(例如,“如果他们是吸烟者,如果他们患有抑郁症、焦虑症……”),并讨论了心理功能障碍(例如,适应不良的回避或对再受伤的恐惧)如何限制康复期间的关键行为(例如,对物理治疗方案的依从性)。在未经提示的情况下,提供者还引用了心理研究中的恢复力相关术语,包括(低)“自我效能感”、“灾难性思维”和(缺乏)“心理坚韧”作为障碍。关于良好结果的促进因素,各种社会和社会经济因素出现,包括恢复、社会支持和“特权”(例如职业或教育)之间的生物社会联系。这些观点出现在各个地点和提供者类型中。

结论

尽管生物医学模式在临床实践中占主导地位,但来自所有地点、各种角色的提供者在没有直接引导的情况下,从生物心理社会相互关联的因素的角度定义了良好结果及其障碍和促进因素。因此,类似的一级创伤中心可能比最初预期的更愿意采用生物心理社会护理方法。

临床意义

本研究中提供者的观点与越来越多的关于生物医学和心理社会因素在手术结果和向慢性疼痛过渡风险中的作用的研究一致。为了将这些肯定的态度转化为实践,其他一级创伤中心可以鼓励采用生物心理社会方法的领导者分享他们的观点,并在生物心理社会概念化和治疗方面培训其他提供者。

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