Use of biobehavioral interventions in children undergoing surgery and associated patient-reported outcomes

Gwyneth A. Sullivan , Yao Tian , Willemijn L.A. Schäfer , Kayla M. Giger , Maxwell Joseph Willberding , Audra J. Reiter , Bonnie Essner , Andrew J. Hu , Martha C. Ingram , Salva Balbale , Julie K. Johnson , Jane L. Holl , Mehul V. Raval
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Abstract

Background

: Biobehavioral interventions including relaxation, distraction, and mindfulness meditation exercises have been shown to decrease perioperative stress, anxiety, and pain. Our aims were to 1) quantify pediatric surgical patient-reported pre-operative exposure to and post-operative use of biobehavioral interventions; 2) understand barriers and facilitators to incorporation of biobehavioral interventions into clinical practice; and 3) evaluate associated patient-reported outcomes.

Methods

: We conducted an embedded mixed-methods study with a quantitative focus. Data were collected as part of the 18-hospital ENhanced Recovery In CHildren Undergoing Surgery (ENRICH-US) clinical trial for children, ages 10–18 years, undergoing elective gastrointestinal surgery. Patients/caregivers were surveyed about preoperative exposure to and postoperative use of biobehavioral interventions. Four semi-structured group interviews with 20 pediatric surgery providers were conducted. Outcomes included pain-related functional disability, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and perioperative nervousness.

Results

: 41 % (n = 67) of 164 enrolled patients/caregivers reported preoperative exposure to and 71 % (n = 117) reported postoperative use of a biobehavioral intervention(s). Barriers to incorporation of biobehavioral interventions included lack of standardized workflows, clinician knowledge, and resources. Potential facilitators included media and peer-counseling. After adjusting for individual and hospital characteristics, those who reported using a biobehavioral intervention(s) were 70 % less likely to report worsened postoperative nervousness (95 % CI 0.10–0.91; p = 0.03). Reported use of a biobehavioral intervention(s) was not found to be associated with pain-related functional disability or HRQoL.

Conclusions

: Use of a biobehavioral intervention(s) may stabilize postoperative nervousness of children undergoing surgery. There is a need for redesign of clinical workflows and clinician training to facilitate integration of biobehavioral interventions.

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对接受手术的儿童进行生物行为干预及相关的患者报告结果
背景:包括放松、分散注意力和正念冥想练习在内的生物行为干预已被证明可以减轻围手术期的压力、焦虑和疼痛。我们的目的是:1)量化儿科手术患者报告的术前接触和术后使用生物行为干预的情况;2)了解将生物行为干预纳入临床实践的障碍和促进因素;3)评估患者报告的相关结果:我们开展了一项以定量为重点的嵌入式混合方法研究。我们收集的数据是 18 家医院开展的 "接受手术儿童的强化康复"(ENRICH-US)临床试验的一部分,对象是接受择期胃肠道手术的 10-18 岁儿童。对患者/护理人员术前接触和术后使用生物行为干预的情况进行了调查。对 20 名儿科手术提供者进行了四次半结构化小组访谈。结果包括与疼痛相关的功能障碍、与健康相关的生活质量(HRQoL)以及围手术期的紧张情绪:结果:在 164 名登记的患者/护理人员中,41%(n = 67)报告在术前接触过生物行为干预,71%(n = 117)报告在术后使用过生物行为干预。采用生物行为干预的障碍包括缺乏标准化工作流程、临床医生知识和资源。潜在的促进因素包括媒体和同伴咨询。在对个人和医院特征进行调整后,报告使用生物行为干预措施的患者报告术后紧张症恶化的可能性降低了 70%(95 % CI 0.10-0.91; p = 0.03)。报告使用生物行为干预与疼痛相关功能障碍或 HRQoL 无关:结论:使用生物行为干预可稳定接受手术儿童的术后紧张情绪。需要重新设计临床工作流程并对临床医生进行培训,以促进生物行为干预的整合。
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