Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University Centre for Nursing and Midwifery, Ghent University Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent, Belgium.
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, School of Health Sciences, Orebro universitet, Örebro, Sweden.
BMJ Open. 2024 Nov 1;14(10):e089773. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-089773.
Medical adhesives provide securement of medical devices, facilitate skin protection and allow non-invasive monitoring. Application and removal of medical adhesives can result in pain, dermatitis, trauma or other skin lesions. Understanding patients' experiences when subjected to medical adhesives will contribute to the improvement of clinical routines and the development and improvement of new adhesive technologies. A qualitative systematic review was conducted to identify patients' experiences with the application of medical adhesives to the skin.
Qualitative systematic review.
CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE and PsycINFO were systematically searched for records published between January 2012 and March 2024. Reference lists of systematic reviews and included articles were reviewed.
Studies published in Danish, Dutch, English, German, Norwegian and Swedish that collected qualitative data on the experience of patients with the application of medical adhesives to the skin were considered. There were no restrictions regarding age, gender or setting.
Study selection, data extraction and quality appraisal were independently conducted by two reviewers. The methodological quality of the studies under consideration was assessed using the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Tool for Qualitative Research. The extracted data were synthesised using meta-aggregation.
Nine studies describing patients' experiences were included. The included studies only reflected experiences with wound dressings. Meta-aggregation of the extracted findings resulted in seven categories that were further synthesised into two synthesised findings: 'strategies to alleviate pain during dressing changes' and 'dressing construction and characteristics'. The synthesised findings illustrate that patients experience pain during dressing change and removal and employ various strategies to alleviate this pain.
Patients experience pain and discomfort when dressings are changed or removed. Future research should focus on enhancing both routines and technologies, with a particular emphasis on advancing skin-friendly adhesives to reduce unwanted side effects.
CRD42023457711.
医用黏合剂可固定医疗器械、保护皮肤并允许进行非侵入性监测。黏合剂的应用和去除可能导致疼痛、皮炎、创伤或其他皮肤损伤。了解患者在使用医用黏合剂时的体验将有助于改进临床常规,并促进新黏合技术的开发和改进。本研究进行了一项定性系统综述,以确定患者对医用黏合剂在皮肤上的应用的体验。
定性系统综述。
系统检索了 CINAHL、EMBASE、MEDLINE 和 PsycINFO 中 2012 年 1 月至 2024 年 3 月期间发表的记录,并对系统综述的参考文献列表和包含的文章进行了回顾。
发表在丹麦语、荷兰语、英语、德语、挪威语和瑞典语的研究,这些研究收集了患者对医用黏合剂在皮肤上的应用体验的定性数据。研究对象的年龄、性别或环境没有限制。
两位评审员独立进行了研究选择、数据提取和质量评估。使用 Joanna Briggs 研究所定性研究批判性评价工具评估所考虑研究的方法学质量。使用元聚合对提取的数据进行综合。
纳入了 9 项描述患者体验的研究。纳入的研究仅反映了伤口敷料的体验。对提取结果的元聚合产生了 7 个类别,进一步综合为两个综合发现:“减轻敷料更换过程中疼痛的策略”和“敷料的结构和特征”。综合发现表明,患者在更换或去除敷料时会感到疼痛和不适,并采用各种策略来减轻这种疼痛。
患者在更换或去除敷料时会感到疼痛和不适。未来的研究应侧重于改进常规和技术,特别是推进对皮肤友好的黏合剂,以减少不必要的副作用。
PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42023457711。