Differential Utilization of Parental Presence and Premedication for Induction of Anesthesia in Pediatric Patients

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose

Known disparities exist in pain treatment between African American, Latino, and White children. A recent study described ‘adultification’ of Black children, with Black children being less likely to have a parent present at induction of anesthesia and less likely to receive an anxiolytic premedication before proceeding to the operating room. The aim of this study is to identify differences based on race and socioeconomic status when treating children and their families for anesthetic induction. We hypothesize that differences exist such that certain populations are less likely to receive sedative premedication and less likely to have parents present at induction of anesthesia.

Design

This was a retrospective cohort study.

Methods

Demographic data were obtained along with type of surgical procedure, type of anesthesia induction, use of premedication, and involvement of child life services (including the plan for parental presence at induction) for all pediatric patients presenting for anesthetics from February 2019 to March 2020. Statistical analysis consisted of fitting logistic mixed effects models for caregiver presence or for midazolam use during induction, with fixed effects for sex, race, ethnicity, language, public/private insurance, and anesthetic risk, and with the provider as a random effect.

Findings

A total of 7,753 patients were included in our statistical analyses, and parental presence focused on 4,102 patients with documentation from child life specialists. Females were less likely than males to have parents present at induction (odds ratio [OR] 0.77, confidence interval [CI] [0.67, 0.89]). When looking at race, American Indian/Alaskan Native patients (OR 0.23 [CI 0.093, 0.47]) and Black/African American patients OR 0.64 [CI 0.47, 0.89]) were less likely to have a parent present induction than White patients. Patients with private insurance were more likely to have parents present than patients with public insurance (OR 0.63 CI [0.5, 0.78]). These findings held true in age-separated sensitivity analysis. Asian patients were less likely to receive midazolam premedication (OR 0.65 CI [0.49, 0.86]).

Conclusions

This study supports previous work showing differential use of parental presence at induction based on race. Additionally, it also shows different treatment based on sex and public insurance status, a surrogate for socioeconomic status.

儿科患者在麻醉诱导时对父母在场和预先用药的不同利用。
目的:众所周知,非裔美国儿童、拉丁裔美国儿童和白人儿童在疼痛治疗方面存在差异。最近的一项研究描述了黑人儿童的 "成人化 "现象,即黑人儿童在麻醉诱导时有父母在场的可能性较低,而且在进入手术室前接受抗焦虑药物预处理的可能性较低。本研究旨在确定在对儿童及其家人进行麻醉诱导时,基于种族和社会经济地位的差异。我们假设存在这样的差异,即某些人群接受镇静剂预处理的可能性较低,麻醉诱导时父母在场的可能性较低:这是一项回顾性队列研究:收集了2019年2月至2020年3月期间所有接受麻醉的儿科患者的人口统计学数据,以及手术类型、麻醉诱导类型、预用药的使用情况和儿童生活服务的参与情况(包括诱导时父母在场的计划)。统计分析包括拟合护理人员在场或诱导过程中使用咪达唑仑的逻辑混合效应模型,性别、种族、民族、语言、公共/私人保险和麻醉风险为固定效应,提供者为随机效应:共有 7753 名患者被纳入我们的统计分析中,其中 4102 名患者的父母在场,并有儿童生活专家的证明文件。与男性相比,女性在诱导时父母在场的可能性较低(几率比[OR]0.77,置信区间[CI][0.67, 0.89])。就种族而言,美国印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民患者(OR 0.23 [CI 0.093, 0.47])和黑人/非洲裔美国人患者(OR 0.64 [CI 0.47, 0.89])的父母出席引产的可能性低于白人患者。与有公共保险的患者相比,有私人保险的患者有父母在场的可能性更高(OR 0.63 CI [0.5, 0.78])。这些结果在按年龄进行的敏感性分析中也得到了证实。亚裔患者接受咪达唑仑预处理的可能性较低(OR 0.65 CI [0.49,0.86]):本研究支持了之前的研究,表明诱导时父母在场的使用因种族而异。此外,该研究还显示了基于性别和公共保险状况(社会经济状况的代用指标)的不同待遇。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
17.60%
发文量
279
审稿时长
90 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of PeriAnesthesia Nursing provides original, peer-reviewed research for a primary audience that includes nurses in perianesthesia settings, including ambulatory surgery, preadmission testing, postanesthesia care (Phases I and II), extended observation, and pain management. The Journal provides a forum for sharing professional knowledge and experience relating to management, ethics, legislation, research, and other aspects of perianesthesia nursing.
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