尼日利亚哈科特港一家三级医院接受麻醉和外科手术的儿童家长的术前焦虑和抑郁

A. Aggo, C. Okeafor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导论:尽管儿科手术干预具有潜在的治愈性,儿科麻醉学也取得了进步,但对发病率和死亡率的恐惧仍然充斥着家长。接受麻醉和手术的儿童家长的焦虑和抑郁症状可能威胁到术后恢复。因此,本研究评估了术前父母焦虑和抑郁的患病率及其影响因素。方法:这是一项横断面研究,包括在尼日利亚河流州哈科特港大学教学医院安排手术的孩子的父母。术前焦虑和抑郁是因变量,并根据汉密尔顿焦虑抑郁量表(HADS)确定,这是一个经过验证和可靠的工具。自变量包括社会人口统计学和临床相关变量。双因素和多因素分析均在0.05显著水平下进行。结果:本研究共纳入了100位接受外科手术的孩子的父母。术前父母焦虑和抑郁的患病率分别为58.0% (95% CI: 48.3 ~ 67.7%)和49.0% (95% CI:39.2 ~ 58.8%)。急诊手术患者术前父母焦虑的发生率(100.0%)显著高于择期手术患者(56.5%)(p值=0.034)。术前父母焦虑的发生率随患儿数量的增加而降低50% (AOR=0.505;95%CI:0.258 ~ 0.991)。父母抑郁与全麻的比值显著降低(AOR= 0.022;95%CI:0.001-0.701),且现有子女数量较高(AOR= 0.505;95%置信区间:0.258—-0.991)。结论:本组患者术前焦虑、抑郁的发生率较高。研究结果强调了术前评估父母焦虑和抑郁的必要性,特别是那些只有一个孩子或孩子数量较少的父母。
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Preoperative Anxiety and Depression among Parents of Children undergoing Anesthesia and Surgical Operations in a Tertiary Hospital in Port Harcourt, Nigeria
Introduction: In spite of pediatric surgical interventions being potentially curative, and the advancement in pediatric anesthesiology, the fear of morbidity and mortality still abounds among parents. Anxiety and depressive symptoms among parents of children undergoing anesthesia and surgery could threaten postoperative recovery. This study therefore assessed the prevalence and factors of preoperative parental anxiety and depression. Methodology: This was a cross-sectional study comprising of parents whose children were scheduled for surgery at the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital, Rivers State, Nigeria. Preoperative anxiety and depression were the dependent variables, and were determined based on the Hamilton Anxiety Depression Scale (HADS), a validated and reliable tool. Socio-demographic and clinical-related variables comprised the independent variables. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were performed at 0.05 significant level. Results: The study comprised a total of 100 parents whose children were undergoing surgical operations. The prevalence of preoperative parental anxiety and depression were 58.0% (95% CI: 48.3-67.7%) and 49.0% (95% CI:39.2-58.8%) respectively. Prevalence of preoperative parental anxiety was significantly higher among emergency surgeries (100.0%) in comparison to elective surgeries (56.5%) (p-value=0.034). The odds of preoperative parental anxiety was 50% lower with increasing existing number of children (AOR=0.505;95%CI:0.258-0.991). Parental depression had significantly lower odds with administration of general anesthesia (AOR= 0.022; 95%CI:0.001-0.701), and having higher existing number of children (AOR= 0.505; 95%CI:0.258-0.991). Conclusion: The prevalence rates of preoperative anxiety and depression in the study setting are high. The findings highlight the need for evaluation of parental anxiety and depression pre-operatively especially those with single or lower number of children.
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