互联网上关于吸入性挥发性麻醉和全静脉麻醉的公开信息的内容和质量描述:描述性研究。

Xinwen Hu, Bethany R Tellor Pennington, Michael S Avidan, Sachin Kheterpal, Nastassjia G deBourbon, Mary C Politi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:全球每年有3亿多患者接受需要麻醉的外科手术。有两种标准的全身麻醉管理选择:吸入挥发性麻醉(INVA)和全静脉麻醉(TIVA)。比较这些方法及其对患者体验和结果的影响的证据有限。患者经常从互联网等渠道获取这些信息。然而,大多数关于麻醉相关主题的网站并不全面、更新和完全准确。关于INVA和TIVA的基于网络的患者信息的质量和可用性尚未得到充分检查。目的:本研究旨在(1)评估互联网上关于INVA和TIVA的信息的可用性、可读性、准确性和质量,以及(2)确定可以推荐给患者的高质量网站,以帮助他们寻求麻醉信息和做出决策。方法:从2022年4月到2022年11月,使用谷歌进行基于网络的搜索。网站使用基于国际患者决策艾滋病标准开发的编码工具进行编码,并适用于评估描述INVA和TIVA的网站。可读性是用Flesch-Kincaid(F-K)等级水平和Gobbledygook(SMOG)可读性公式的简单度量来计算的。结果:共有67个网站包含201个单独的网页,用于编码和分析。大多数网站提供了全身麻醉的基本定义(无意识,n=57.85%;镇痛,n=47.70%)。大约一半的网站描述了全身麻醉的常见副作用,而很少有网站描述罕见但严重的不良事件,如术中意识(n=31,46%)、过敏反应或过敏反应(n=29,43%)和恶性热疗(n=18,27%)。在67个网站中,F-K评分中位数为11.3(IQR 9.5-12.8),SMOG评分中位数为13.5(IQR 12.2-14.4),均远高于美国医学协会(AMA)推荐的六年级阅读水平。共有51个(76%)网站将INVA与TIVA区分为全身麻醉选项。在51个网站中,共有12个(24%)明确表示,需要考虑接受INVA与TIVA进行全身麻醉。只有10个(20%)网站对INVA和TIVA进行了直接比较,讨论了它们的积极和消极特征。共有12个(24%)网站讨论了麻醉护理规划中共享决策的概念,但没有一个网站专门要求患者思考INVA和TIVA的哪些特征对他们最重要。结论:虽然大多数网站都描述了INVA和TIVA,但很少有网站提供比较。对于INVA与TIVA的选择,需要高质量的患者教育和决策支持,以有助于患者理解的形式提供准确、更全面的信息。
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Description of the Content and Quality of Publicly Available Information on the Internet About Inhaled Volatile Anesthesia and Total Intravenous Anesthesia: Descriptive Study.

Background: More than 300 million patients undergo surgical procedures requiring anesthesia worldwide annually. There are 2 standard-of-care general anesthesia administration options: inhaled volatile anesthesia (INVA) and total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA). There is limited evidence comparing these methods and their impact on patient experiences and outcomes. Patients often seek this information from sources such as the internet. However, the majority of websites on anesthesia-related topics are not comprehensive, updated, and fully accurate. The quality and availability of web-based patient information about INVA and TIVA have not been sufficiently examined.

Objective: This study aimed to (1) assess information on the internet about INVA and TIVA for availability, readability, accuracy, and quality and (2) identify high-quality websites that can be recommended to patients to assist in their anesthesia information-seeking and decision-making.

Methods: Web-based searches were conducted using Google from April 2022 to November 2022. Websites were coded using a coding instrument developed based on the International Patient Decision Aids Standards criteria and adapted to be appropriate for assessing websites describing INVA and TIVA. Readability was calculated with the Flesch-Kincaid (F-K) grade level and the simple measure of Gobbledygook (SMOG) readability formula.

Results: A total of 67 websites containing 201 individual web pages were included for coding and analysis. Most of the websites provided a basic definition of general anesthesia (unconsciousness, n=57, 85%; analgesia, n=47, 70%). Around half of the websites described common side effects of general anesthesia, while fewer described the rare but serious adverse events, such as intraoperative awareness (n=31, 46%), allergic reactions or anaphylaxis (n=29, 43%), and malignant hyperthermia (n=18, 27%). Of the 67 websites, the median F-K grade level was 11.3 (IQR 9.5-12.8) and the median SMOG score was 13.5 (IQR 12.2-14.4), both far above the American Medical Association (AMA) recommended reading level of sixth grade. A total of 51 (76%) websites distinguished INVA versus TIVA as general anesthesia options. A total of 12 of the 51 (24%) websites explicitly stated that there is a decision to be considered about receiving INVA versus TIVA for general anesthesia. Only 10 (20%) websites made any direct comparisons between INVA and TIVA, discussing their positive and negative features. A total of 12 (24%) websites addressed the concept of shared decision-making in planning anesthesia care, but none specifically asked patients to think about which features of INVA and TIVA matter the most to them.

Conclusions: While the majority of websites described INVA and TIVA, few provided comparisons. There is a need for high-quality patient education and decision support about the choice of INVA versus TIVA to provide accurate and more comprehensive information in a format conducive to patient understanding.

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