护士如何使用安慰来支持儿童和青少年急性和慢性疼痛的管理:一项探索性、解释性质的研究

B. Carter, Jane Harris, A. Jordan
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引用次数: 5

摘要

在儿童疼痛的情况下,保证被认为是促进痛苦。通常,口头安慰是简短的、一般性的陈述(“没事”、“别担心”);很少有研究考虑护士采取的更广泛的安抚行为和行动。大多数研究集中在安慰和痛苦之间的单向、二元关系(父母对孩子、专业人员对孩子),未能捕捉到内在的复杂性。采用探索性、解释性和定性方法,本文报告了一项混合方法研究的定性访谈部分的发现,涉及护士在与儿童及其父母谈论疼痛时如何积极使用安慰。在完成一项国际在线调查(通过疼痛和儿童护理网络以及通过通讯、电子邮件和社交媒体分发)后,招募了18名具有管理儿童疼痛经验的护士。所有18名护士完成了一项半结构化访谈,内容涉及她们在英国(n = 14)、加拿大(n = 3)和澳大利亚(n = 1)的初级、中级和三级护理机构中管理儿童疼痛的经验,护理经验从资格预审到>20年不等。专题分析产生了三个主题,反映了护士在与儿童及其父母的接触中集中安抚的主要方式:(a)儿童和父母,(b)儿童,(c)父母。护士通过语言、手势、建立关系、个性化的方法、教育和准备来获得安慰。该研究强调了护士提供的与儿童疼痛有关的保证的多样性。我们的研究发现,当护士安慰孩子关于疼痛时,他们将安慰集中在三个不同的方向上(孩子,父母,以及孩子和父母的合作关系);之前的研究并未明确承认这一点。我们强调了护士采取的广泛的隐性和显性安慰行动,并提出超越有限的发声的安慰是一个复杂的一揽子护理的一部分,可以支持儿童当前和未来的疼痛经历。
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How nurses use reassurance to support the management of acute and chronic pain in children and young people: An exploratory, interpretative qualitative study
Reassurance in the context of pediatric pain is regarded to promote distress. Typically, spoken reassurance is reported as short, generic statements (“it's ok,” “don't worry”); little research has considered wider reassuring behaviors and actions undertaken by nurses. Most studies focus on unidirectional, dyadic relationships between reassurance and pain (parent‐to‐child, professional‐to‐child) failing to capture the inherent complexities. Adopting an exploratory, interpretative, and qualitative approach, this paper reports on findings from the qualitative interview component of a mixed‐methods study, concerning how nurses actively use reassurance when talking to children and their parents about pain. Eighteen nurses with experience of managing children's pain were recruited on completion of an international online survey (distributed by pain and children's nursing networks and via newsletter, email, and social media). All 18 nurses completed a semi‐structured interview concerning their experiences of managing children's pain working in the UK (n = 14), Canada (n = 3), and Australia (n = 1) in primary, secondary, and tertiary settings with nursing experience ranging from pre‐qualification to >20 years. Thematic analysis generated three themes which reflect the main ways in which nurses focus their reassurance within encounters with children and their parent(s): (a) on child and parent(s), (b) on the child, and (c) on the parent. Nurses generated reassurance using language, gesture, relationship building, individualizing approaches, education, and preparation. The study highlights the diversity of reassurance provided by nurses in relation to children's pain. Our study finds that when nurses reassure children about pain, they focus their reassurance in three distinct directions (child, parents, and children and parents in partnership); this has not been specifically acknowledged by previous research. We highlight the wide range of implicit and explicit reassurance actions undertaken by nurses and propose that reassurance that extends beyond limited vocalizations is part of a complex package of care that can support children's current and future pain experiences.
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