儿童急性淋巴细胞白血病维持治疗期间父母对睡眠障碍的理解存在差距。

IF 1 4区 医学 Q3 NURSING
Eric S Zhou, Ariana F Valenzuela, Rebecca Robbins, Jessica M Page, Kira Bona
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:急性淋巴细胞白血病(Acute lymphoblastic leukemia, ALL)是儿童时期最常见的癌症,其生存率接近90%。睡眠障碍在ALL患者中很常见,通常发生在化疗的初始阶段。虽然在了解和干预存活期间的这一问题方面已经做出了重大努力,但对积极接受治疗的儿童的研究却少得多。在目前的研究中,我们试图更好地了解父母在维持治疗期间睡眠领域的经历,包括他们对孩子的医疗团队如何管理睡眠障碍的看法,以及如何改善睡眠管理的建议。方法:15名儿童ALL患者(4-12岁)家长完成半结构式访谈。访谈内容分析采用多阶段专题分析。结果:家长们一致表示,他们对治疗期间出现的睡眠中断感到措手不及,他们经常报告说,他们不记得被告知这是副作用。他们热衷于学习如何改善孩子的睡眠,尽管他们不希望药物治疗干预或额外的医疗/社会心理预约来解决这个问题。结论:尽管医疗服务提供者就睡眠问题进行了持续的沟通,但家长对这个问题的了解有限。这为改善治疗相关的睡眠障碍提供了一个明显的干预目标。明确的信息可能有助于引导父母对孩子的治疗和潜在的睡眠障碍的关注和期望,可能以行为干预的形式,使父母能够了解如何在接受ALL治疗时支持孩子的睡眠健康。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gaps in Parental Understanding of Sleep Disturbances During Maintenance Therapy for Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.

Background: Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common cancer in childhood, with survival rates approaching 90%. Sleep disturbance is common among ALL patients, often developing during the initial stages of chemotherapy treatment. While there have been significant efforts to understand and intervene in this issue during survivorship, there is far less research on children who are actively receiving treatment. In the current study, we sought to better understand the parent's experience in the sleep domain during maintenance therapy, including their perceptions of how their child's medical team had managed sleep disturbances, and recommendations for how to improve sleep management. Method: Fifteen parents of pediatric ALL patients (aged 4-12 years) completed semistructured interviews. Interview content was analyzed using a multistage thematic analysis. Results: Parents consistently expressed feeling unprepared to manage the sleep disruptions that arose during treatment, often reporting that they did not recall being told this would be a side effect. They were enthusiastic about learning how to improve their child's sleep, though they did not want pharmacotherapeutic interventions or additional medical/psychosocial appointments to address this. Conclusion: Despite consistent provider communication on sleep, parents report limited knowledge of the issue. This provides an obvious intervention target to improve treatment-related sleep disturbances. Clear messaging may help direct parents' attention and expectations regarding their child's treatment and potential for disturbed sleep, possibly in the form of a behavioral intervention that empowers parents with information about how to support their child's sleep health while they are undergoing treatment for ALL.

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CiteScore
3.30
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