Suppr超能文献

公众对医疗保健、麻醉和气候变化的认知与态度:一项调查研究。

Public perception and attitudes towards health care, anesthesia, and climate change: a survey study.

作者信息

Ip Vivian H Y, Ma Jenice, Zardynezhad Ava, Sondekoppam Rakesh V

机构信息

Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Alberta Health Services and Cumming School of Medicine, Calgary, AB, Canada.

Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.

出版信息

Can J Anaesth. 2025 Aug;72(8):1233-1239. doi: 10.1007/s12630-025-03019-w. Epub 2025 Jul 18.

Abstract

PURPOSE

Hospitals and especially operating rooms are known to have a significant carbon footprint. With health care moving towards patient-centered care, we sought to investigate the perception and attitudes of patients and/or their family members towards health care, anesthesia, and climate change, and its influence on their care choices. We hypothesized that < 30% of our study population were aware of health care's significant contributions to climate change.

METHOD

Following research ethics board approval and participants' consent, we conducted interviews using a questionnaire that queried participating patients' perceptions on climate change and their knowledge of health care's environmental impact. To determine if such perceptions influenced their care choices, we proposed two different anesthesia care choices with different environmental impacts for a hypothetical surgical scenario. Lastly, we sought to determine participants' interest in further information on the topic. We analyzed the survey responses for associations between participants' perceptions of climate change and on health care's carbon footprint with variables pertaining to participant characteristics, their anesthesia care choices, and interest in further knowledge.

RESULTS

Overall, 320 participants completed the survey, of whom 32% acknowledged health care "greatly contributes to climate change." Nevertheless, perceptions did not translate to care choices as many participants still opted for the choice deemed to have a greater environmental impact (45%). A strong association existed between perception of health care's environmental impact and level of education (P = 0.02).

CONCLUSION

Public perception of health care's contribution to climate change was poor albeit higher than anticipated. Participants' perceptions of climate change or health care's impact on the environment did not completely translate into choosing a less carbon-intensive anesthesia care modality for their own care. Efforts to inform patients regarding the environmental impact of anesthetic choices may have minimal impact on individual care choices.

摘要

目的

众所周知,医院尤其是手术室的碳足迹相当大。随着医疗保健朝着以患者为中心的护理方向发展,我们试图调查患者及其家庭成员对医疗保健、麻醉和气候变化的看法与态度,以及这些因素对他们护理选择的影响。我们假设研究人群中知晓医疗保健对气候变化有重大影响的比例低于30%。

方法

在获得研究伦理委员会批准并征得参与者同意后,我们使用问卷进行访谈,该问卷询问了参与患者对气候变化的看法以及他们对医疗保健环境影响的了解程度。为了确定这些看法是否会影响他们的护理选择,对于一个假设的手术场景,我们提出了两种具有不同环境影响的麻醉护理选择。最后,我们试图确定参与者对该主题进一步信息的兴趣。我们分析了调查回复,以探究参与者对气候变化的看法、对医疗保健碳足迹的看法与参与者特征、麻醉护理选择以及进一步了解知识的兴趣等变量之间的关联。

结果

总体而言,320名参与者完成了调查,其中32%的人承认医疗保健“对气候变化有很大贡献”。然而,这些看法并未转化为护理选择,因为许多参与者仍然选择了被认为对环境影响更大的选项(45%)。对医疗保健环境影响的认知与教育水平之间存在强烈关联(P = 0.02)。

结论

公众对医疗保健对气候变化的贡献认知度较低,尽管高于预期。参与者对气候变化或医疗保健对环境的影响的看法并未完全转化为为自己选择碳密集度较低的麻醉护理方式。告知患者麻醉选择对环境的影响的努力可能对个人护理选择影响甚微。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验