儿童自我报告与家长代理报告症状的比较:来自晚期癌症儿童的纵向症状评估研究结果

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q3 NURSING Journal for Specialists in Pediatric Nursing Pub Date : 2020-10-28 DOI:10.1111/jspn.12316
Kathleen E. Montgomery PhD, RN, PCNS-BC, CPHON, Kaylee Vos BSN, RN, CPHON, Jennifer L. Raybin MSN, RN, CPNP, Jessica Ward PhD, MPH, RN, CPNP, Chelsea Balian MSN, RN, CNS, CPNP, Elizabeth A. Gilger MSN, APRN-BC, CPON, Zhanhai Li PhD
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引用次数: 20

摘要

本报告是对一项主要研究数据的亚分析,解决了在理解晚期癌症儿童及其父母之间症状报告的异同方面的差距。本亚分析的目的是:(1)比较儿童和青少年及其父母群体之间的症状患病率、症状负担、症状频率、严重程度和痛苦的报告,以及(2)描述个体儿童-父母双体中症状报告的一致性。设计与方法来自5个儿科癌症中心的46名复发、难治性或进展性癌症患儿及其父母每2周报告一次症状,持续61周。儿童生活质量和症状评估技术-记忆症状评估量表用于测量症状的患病率,频率,严重程度和困扰。结果儿童和家长报告疼痛、疲劳、恶心和睡眠困难是最常见的症状。除呼吸短促外,家长报告的症状患病率高于儿童。父母报告的差异在疲劳、恶心、食欲不振、感觉紧张和悲伤方面具有统计学意义。除呼吸短促外,父母报告的所有个体症状负担分数都高于儿童。儿童在32种可能的症状频率、严重程度和痛苦评分中有19种得分较高。孩子在频率和严重程度上得分更高,而父母在痛苦方面得分更高。睡眠困难、疼痛、恶心和腹泻表现出最高的一致性,而感觉紧张、悲伤、易怒和疲劳在儿童和父母的症状报告中表现出最低的一致性。实践意义考虑到有证据支持父母对症状流行程度的高估和对某些症状的症状频率和严重程度的低估,在适当的情况下,从儿童而不是父母那里获得症状经验是最佳实践。当必须使用代理评分员时,儿科护士应该教育代理评分员关于症状评估,并评估和倾向于可能没有表现出视觉线索的症状。儿科护士应进行全面的症状评估,并对症状之外的症状进行评估,包括对身体和心理症状的频率、严重程度和痛苦程度的评估,以优化症状管理策略。
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Comparison of child self-report and parent proxy-report of symptoms: Results from a longitudinal symptom assessment study of children with advanced cancer

Purpose

This report represents a subanalysis of data from a primary study and addresses a gap in understanding the similarities and differences of symptom reporting between children with advanced cancer and their parents. The objectives of this subanalysis were to (1) compare reports of symptom prevalence, symptom burden, and symptom frequency, severity, and distress between groups of children and adolescents and their parents, and (2) describe concordance of symptom reports within individual child–parent dyads.

Design and Methods

Forty-six children with relapsed, refractory, or progressive cancer and their parents from five pediatric cancer centers prospectively reported symptoms every 2 weeks for up to 61 weeks. The abbreviated Pediatric Quality of Life and Evaluation of Symptoms Technology—Memorial Symptom Assessment Scales were used to measure symptom prevalence, frequency, severity, and distress.

Results

Children and parents reported pain, fatigue, nausea, and sleeping difficulties as the most frequently occurring symptoms. With the exception of shortness of breath, parents reported symptom prevalence more often than children. The differences in parent reports were statistically significant for fatigue, nausea, lack of appetite, feeling nervous, and sadness. Parents reported higher symptom burden scores compared to children for all individual symptoms except shortness of breath. Children reported higher scores for 19 of 32 possible symptom frequency, severity, and distress ratings. Children's scores were higher for frequency and severity, while parents’ scores were higher for distress. Sleeping difficulties, pain, nausea, and diarrhea demonstrated the highest concordance, while feeling nervous, sadness, irritability, and fatigue yielded the lowest concordance between children's and parents’ symptom reports.

Practice Implications

Eliciting the symptom experience from the child, when appropriate, rather than a parent proxy is best practice given evidence supporting the overestimation of symptom prevalence by parents and underestimation of symptom frequency and severity for some symptoms. When proxy raters must be used, pediatric nurses should educate proxy raters regarding symptom assessment, and assess and tend to symptoms that may not exhibit visual cues. Pediatric nurses should conduct a comprehensive symptom assessment and evaluate beyond the presence of symptoms and include an assessment of frequency, severity, and distress for physical and psychological symptoms to optimize symptom management strategies.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
7.70%
发文量
27
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Linking science and practice by publishing evidence-based information on pediatric nursing and answering the question, ''How might this information affect nursing practice?'' The Journal for Specialists in Pediatric Nursing (JSPN) is the international evidence-based practice journal for nurses who specialize in the care of children and families. JSPN bridges the gap between research and practice by publishing peer-reviewed reliable, clinically relevant, and readily applicable evidence. The journal integrates the best evidence with pediatric nurses'' passion for achieving the best outcomes. The journal values interdisciplinary perspectives and publishes a wide variety of peer-reviewed papers on clinically relevant topics.
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