Servicio Cántabro de Salud, Santander, Spain.
Faculty of Nursing, Servicio Cántabro de Salud, Universidad de Cantabria, IDIVAL Nursing Research Group, Santander, Spain.
J Clin Nurs. 2023 Sep;32(17-18):6229-6242. doi: 10.1111/jocn.16755. Epub 2023 May 6.
Evidence suggests that preparing patients for surgery using nonpharmacological strategies reduces their anxiety. However, there is no consensus on what the best practices are. This study aims to answer the question: Are interventions using nonpharmacological therapies effective in reducing preoperative anxiety?
Preoperative anxiety causes physiological and psychological adverse effects, with a negative effect on postoperative recovery.
According to the World Health Organization, between 266 and 360 million surgical procedures are performed annually worldwide, and it is estimated that more than 50% of patients will experience some degree of preoperative anxiety.
Systematic review of systematic reviews with results of interventions aimed at mitigating preoperative anxiety.
A search was conducted for systematic reviews with meta-analyses published between 2012 and 2021 in Medline, Scopus, Web of Science and Cochrane Library. Quality was assessed using the AMSTAR-2 scale. The protocol was registered in PROSPERO.
A total of 1016 studies were examined, of which 17 systematic reviews were selected, yielding 188 controlled trials with 16,884 participants. In adults, the most common intervention included music, followed by massage, in children virtual reality and clowns. Almost all controlled trials reported a reduction in preoperative anxiety after the intervention, of which almost half had statistically significant results.
Interventions that include music, massage and virtual reality reduce preoperative anxiety and have shown that they are cost-effective, minimally invasive and with a low risk of adverse effects. Preoperative anxiety can be reduced through a short-term intervention involving nursing professionals as an alternative or complement to drugs.
This review suggests that nursing professionals, in collaboration with other health professionals, should continue to conduct research on the reduction in preoperative anxiety. Further research in this area is needed, to reduce heterogeneity and consolidate the results.
Not applied to our study, as it is a systematic review of systematic reviews.
有证据表明,使用非药物策略让患者为手术做好准备可以减轻他们的焦虑。然而,对于最佳实践方法尚未达成共识。本研究旨在回答以下问题:使用非药物疗法的干预措施是否能有效降低术前焦虑?
术前焦虑会导致生理和心理不良反应,对术后恢复产生负面影响。
根据世界卫生组织的数据,全球每年进行的手术程序在 2.66 亿至 3.6 亿次之间,估计有超过 50%的患者会经历不同程度的术前焦虑。
对旨在减轻术前焦虑的干预措施的系统评价进行系统评价。
在 Medline、Scopus、Web of Science 和 Cochrane Library 中检索了 2012 年至 2021 年期间发表的系统评价和荟萃分析。使用 AMSTAR-2 量表评估质量。该方案在 PROSPERO 中进行了注册。
共检查了 1016 项研究,其中选择了 17 项系统评价,得出了 188 项对照试验,涉及 16884 名参与者。在成年人中,最常见的干预措施包括音乐,其次是按摩;在儿童中,虚拟现实和小丑最常见。几乎所有对照试验都报告干预后术前焦虑有所减轻,其中近一半具有统计学意义。
包括音乐、按摩和虚拟现实在内的干预措施可降低术前焦虑,并已证明它们具有成本效益、微创且不良反应风险低。通过涉及护理专业人员的短期干预,可以减轻术前焦虑,作为药物的替代或补充。
本综述表明,护理专业人员应与其他卫生专业人员合作,继续开展减少术前焦虑的研究。需要在这一领域开展进一步的研究,以减少异质性并整合结果。
我们的研究不适用,因为它是对系统评价的系统评价。