McCann William D, Hou Xiang-Yu, Stolic Snezana, Ireland Michael J
School of Psychology and Wellbeing, University of Southern Queensland, Ipswich, QLD 4305, Australia.
Poche Centre for Indigenous Health, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4067, Australia.
Healthcare (Basel). 2023 Oct 12;11(20):2721. doi: 10.3390/healthcare11202721.
Following surgery, over 50% of cardiac surgery patients report anxiety, stress and/or depression, with at least 10% meeting clinical diagnoses, which can persist for more than a year. Psychological distress predicts post-surgery health outcomes for cardiac patients. Therefore, post-operative distress represents a critical recovery challenge affecting both physical and psychological health. Despite some research identifying key personal, social, and health service correlates of patient distress, a review or synthesis of this evidence remains unavailable. Understanding these factors can facilitate the identification of high-risk patients, develop tailored support resources and interventions to support optimum recovery. This narrative review synthesises evidence from 39 studies that investigate personal, social, and health service predictors of post-surgery psychological distress among cardiac patients. The following factors predicted lower post-operative distress: participation in pre-operative education, cardiac rehabilitation, having a partner, happier marriages, increased physical activity, and greater social interaction. Conversely, increased pain and functional impairment predicted greater distress. The role of age, and sex in predicting distress is inconclusive. Understanding several factors is limited by the inability to carry out experimental manipulations for ethical reasons (e.g., pain). Future research would profit from addressing key methodological limitations and exploring the role of self-efficacy, pre-operative distress, and pre-operative physical activity. It is recommended that cardiac patients be educated pre-surgery and attend cardiac rehabilitation to decrease distress.
手术后,超过50%的心脏手术患者报告有焦虑、压力和/或抑郁情绪,其中至少10%符合临床诊断标准,且这些情绪可能持续一年以上。心理困扰可预测心脏疾病患者术后的健康状况。因此,术后困扰是影响身心健康的一项关键康复挑战。尽管一些研究确定了患者困扰的关键个人、社会和医疗服务相关因素,但仍缺乏对这些证据的综述或综合分析。了解这些因素有助于识别高危患者,开发量身定制的支持资源和干预措施,以支持最佳康复。本叙述性综述综合了39项研究的证据,这些研究调查了心脏疾病患者术后心理困扰的个人、社会和医疗服务预测因素。以下因素可预测较低的术后困扰:参与术前教育、心脏康复、有伴侣、婚姻更幸福、身体活动增加以及社交互动增多。相反,疼痛加剧和功能障碍预示着更大的困扰。年龄和性别在预测困扰方面的作用尚无定论。由于伦理原因(如疼痛)无法进行实验操作,因此对一些因素的理解受到限制。未来的研究将受益于解决关键的方法学局限性,并探索自我效能、术前困扰和术前身体活动的作用。建议对心脏疾病患者在手术前进行教育,并参加心脏康复以减轻困扰。