Abraham Joanna, Cooksey Krista E, Holzer Katherine J, Mehta Divya, Avidan Michael S, Lenze Eric J
Department of Anesthesiology (JA, KJH, DM, MSA), Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO; Institute for Informatics, Data Science and Biostatistics (JA), Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO.
Department of Surgery (KEC), Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2024 Nov;32(11):1341-1357. doi: 10.1016/j.jagp.2024.06.001. Epub 2024 Jun 11.
Perioperative mental health of older Black surgical patients is associated with poor surgical outcomes; however, evidence-based perioperative interventions are lacking. Our two study objectives included: first, examine factors affecting perioperative care experiences of older Black surgical patients with mental health problems, and second, ascertain design and implementation requirements for a culturally-adapted perioperative mental health intervention.
We conducted six focus groups with older Black patients (n = 15; ≥50 years; surgery within the past 5 years and/or interest in mental health research; history of distress, anxiety, or depression coping with surgery/hospitalization/) from a large academic medical center. We engaged study partners, including interventionists and community members, to gather insights on intervention and implementation needs. We followed a hybrid inductive-deductive thematic approach using open coding and the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities Research Framework.
Patients reported that their psychological well-being and long-term mental health outcomes were not appropriately considered during perioperative care. Perceived stressors included interpersonal and structural barriers to using mental healthcare services, clinician treatment biases and ageism in care, and lack of healthcare professional connections/resources. Patients utilized various coping strategies, including talk therapy, faith/spirituality, and family and friends.
This study offers valuable insights into the experiences of older Black surgical patients and the critical elements for developing a personalized perioperative mental health intervention to support their well-being before, during, and after surgery. Our findings demonstrated a need for a patient-centered and culturally adapted intervention targeting the individual/behavioral and interpersonal levels. Informed by the cultural adaptation framework, we propose a multi-component intervention that integrates psychological and pharmacological components.
老年黑人手术患者的围手术期心理健康与不良手术结局相关;然而,缺乏基于证据的围手术期干预措施。我们的两项研究目标包括:第一,研究影响有心理健康问题的老年黑人手术患者围手术期护理体验的因素;第二,确定针对文化适应的围手术期心理健康干预措施的设计和实施要求。
设计、背景和参与者:我们对来自一家大型学术医疗中心的老年黑人患者(n = 15;年龄≥50岁;过去5年内接受过手术和/或对心理健康研究感兴趣;有应对手术/住院的痛苦、焦虑或抑郁病史)进行了6次焦点小组访谈。我们邀请了包括干预专家和社区成员在内的研究伙伴,以收集有关干预和实施需求的见解。我们采用了一种混合的归纳-演绎主题方法,使用开放编码和美国国立少数族裔健康与健康差异研究所的研究框架。
患者报告称,在围手术期护理期间,他们的心理健康和长期心理健康结局没有得到适当考虑。感知到的压力源包括使用心理保健服务的人际和结构障碍、临床医生在护理中的治疗偏见和年龄歧视,以及缺乏医疗保健专业人员的联系/资源。患者采用了各种应对策略,包括谈话疗法、信仰/精神寄托以及家人和朋友。
本研究为老年黑人手术患者的经历以及开发个性化围手术期心理健康干预措施以在手术前、手术中和手术后支持他们的健康的关键要素提供了有价值的见解。我们的研究结果表明需要一种以患者为中心且针对文化进行调整的干预措施,该措施针对个人/行为和人际层面。根据文化适应框架,我们提出了一种整合心理和药物成分的多成分干预措施。