Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine, 660 South Euclid Avenue, MSC 8116-0043-08, Saint Louis, MO 63110-1010, USA.
Syst Rev. 2024 Sep 17;13(1):236. doi: 10.1186/s13643-024-02658-2.
Children utilizing invasive home mechanical ventilation (administered via tracheostomy tube) receive intensive care at home without the support of trained staff typically present in an intensive care unit; within the context of worsening home nursing shortages, much of the 24/7 care burden falls to families which are likely under supported. Prior reviews have explored the quality of life of children receiving various forms of mechanical ventilation, without addressing the impact on the family. Additionally, the literature inconsistently differentiates the unique experience of families with children using invasive home mechanical ventilation from non-invasive, which has lower morbidity and mortality and requires less nursing care in the home. Therefore, our study aims to explore and map the existing literature regarding the impact of invasive home mechanical ventilation on the child and family's quality of life. Identified gaps will inform future research focused on improving the family quality of life of children with invasive home mechanical ventilation.
Five databases will be searched using keywords and controlled vocabulary to identify relevant studies: Ovid Medline, Embase, Scopus, and Cochrane Library. English language studies will meet inclusion criteria if they include primary research studies of children or families of children utilizing invasive home mechanical ventilation at home and assess quality of life. Children and young adults aged 0-25 years will be included. We exclude studies of hospitalized children, studies focused solely on healthcare professional experiences or clinical outcomes, and those focused on the period surrounding discharge from admission for tracheostomy placement. Two independent reviewers will screen studies at the title/abstract and full-text levels. Two independent reviewers will extract data from relevant studies. Disagreements will be resolved by an independent third reviewer. A targeted grey literature search will be performed utilizing ProQuest, clinicaltrials.gov, WHO trial registry, Google Scholar, and professional societies. Findings will be presented in tables and figures along with a narrative summary.
This scoping review seeks to map the literature and provide a descriptive report of the health-related quality of life of children using invasive home mechanical ventilation and their families.
Open Science Framework https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/6GB84 Date of Registration: November 29, 2023.
接受经气管切开管给予的侵入性家庭机械通气(invasive home mechanical ventilation)的儿童在家中接受重症监护,而没有在重症监护病房中接受通常配备的训练有素的医护人员的支持;在家庭护理人员严重短缺的情况下,大部分 24/7 的护理负担都落在了家庭身上,而家庭可能得到的支持有限。先前的综述探讨了接受各种形式机械通气的儿童的生活质量,但并未涉及对家庭的影响。此外,文献中不一致地区分了使用侵入性家庭机械通气的家庭与非侵入性家庭的独特体验,非侵入性家庭的发病率和死亡率较低,在家中需要的护理较少。因此,我们的研究旨在探讨和绘制现有文献,以了解侵入性家庭机械通气对儿童和家庭生活质量的影响。确定的差距将为未来的研究提供信息,重点是改善接受侵入性家庭机械通气的儿童的家庭生活质量。
将使用关键词和受控词汇在五个数据库中搜索,以确定相关研究:Ovid Medline、Embase、Scopus 和 Cochrane Library。如果研究为儿童或使用侵入性家庭机械通气的儿童的家庭的原始研究,并评估生活质量,则符合纳入标准。将纳入 0-25 岁的儿童和青少年。我们排除了住院儿童的研究、仅关注医疗保健专业人员经验或临床结果的研究以及关注气管切开术置管入院后出院期间的研究。两名独立的审查员将在标题/摘要和全文层面筛选研究。两名独立的审查员将从相关研究中提取数据。有分歧的地方将由独立的第三方审查员解决。将利用 ProQuest、clinicaltrials.gov、世卫组织试验登记处、Google Scholar 和专业协会进行有针对性的灰色文献搜索。研究结果将以表格和图形以及叙述性摘要的形式呈现。
本范围综述旨在绘制文献图谱,并提供使用侵入性家庭机械通气的儿童及其家庭健康相关生活质量的描述性报告。
Open Science Framework https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/6GB84 注册日期:2023 年 11 月 29 日。