了解患有慢性非癌症疼痛的儿童和青少年及其家人如何体验疼痛、疼痛管理和服务:荟萃民族志。

Mayara Silveira Bianchim, Line Caes, Liz Forbat, Abbie Jordan, Jane Noyes, Katie Thomson, Ruth Turley, Isabelle Uny, Emma F France
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:儿童慢性疼痛是一个普遍的公共卫生问题。我们需要了解患有慢性疼痛的儿童及其家人是如何体验慢性疼痛及其管理的:就慢性疼痛儿童及其家人对慢性疼痛、治疗和服务的体验和看法开展一项元民族志研究。我们调查了儿童及其家人对慢性疼痛的概念和生活方式;他们对医疗和社会护理服务的看法和需求;以及他们对 "良好 "疼痛管理的概念:设计:元人种学,利益相关者、患者和公众参与设计、搜索和取样策略、分析和传播。综述策略:2022 年 9 月对 12 个文献数据库进行了全面检索和补充检索,以确定针对 3 个月至 18 岁患有慢性非癌性疼痛的儿童及其家人的定性研究。我们纳入了具有丰富解释性数据的研究;使用 "批判性评估技能计划 "工具评估了研究方法的局限性;并对研究结果进行了提取、分析和综合。我们使用 "建议评估、发展和评价分级--定性研究综述中的证据可信度 "来评估综述结论的可信度。我们将研究结果与 14 篇有关儿童慢性非癌症疼痛的 Cochrane 治疗效果综述进行了整合:我们从 182 份出版物中报告的 170 项符合条件的研究中抽取了 43 项研究进行综合。研究存在轻微(24 项)或中度(19 项)方法限制。建议评估、制定和评价分级--定性研究综述的证据置信度对综述结果的评估为高度置信(22 项)、中度置信(13 项)或极低置信(1 项)。中度和重度慢性疼痛对家庭成员的幸福感、自主性和自我认同感、家庭动态、养育方式、友谊和社交、子女教育和父母有偿就业产生了深远的不利影响。大多数儿童和家庭都希望通过生物医学方法治愈疼痛。他们在寻求和获得医疗服务支持以控制疼痛及其影响方面遇到了困难。因此,一些家庭反复到医疗服务机构就诊。对干预效果和试验的 Cochrane 综述没有衡量对儿童和家庭很重要的一些结果,例如疼痛对家庭的影响和疼痛的解决。在考虑干预措施如何发挥作用时,综述主要忽视了生物-心理-社会方法:有关偏头痛/头痛、腹痛等常见疼痛病症、一些罕见病症、有学习障碍的儿童和五岁以下儿童、兄弟姐妹、父亲以及治疗/服务经验的数据有限。我们排除了有关癌症、临终疼痛和医护人员经验的研究:我们提出了以家庭为中心的儿童慢性疼痛管理理论,将医疗和社会护理与社区支持相结合:未来的研究:未来的研究应探讨家庭对服务和治疗(包括阿片类药物)以及社会护理服务的体验;自闭症和学习障碍儿童、5 岁以下儿童以及患有某些常见疼痛病症儿童的体验。我们需要开发和测试以家庭为中心的干预措施和服务:本研究注册为 PROSPERO (CRD42019161455) 和 Cochrane Pain, Palliative and Supportive Care (623):本奖项由美国国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)健康与社会护理服务研究项目(NIHR奖项编号:NIHR128671)资助,全文发表于《健康与社会护理服务研究》第12卷第17期。如需了解更多奖项信息,请访问 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding how children and young people with chronic non-cancer pain and their families experience living with pain, pain management and services: a meta-ethnography.

Background: Childhood chronic pain is a widespread public health issue. We need to understand how children with chronic pain and their families experience chronic pain and its management.

Objectives: To conduct a meta-ethnography on the experiences and perceptions of children with chronic pain and their families of chronic pain, treatments and services. We investigated how children and their families conceptualise and live with chronic pain; what they think of and want from health and social care services; and what they conceptualise as 'good' pain management.

Design: Meta-ethnography with stakeholder and patient and public involvement in the design, search and sampling strategies, analysis and dissemination. Review strategy: comprehensive searches of 12 bibliographic databases and supplementary searches in September 2022, to identify qualitative studies with children aged 3 months to 18 years with chronic non-cancer pain and their families. We included studies with rich explanatory data; appraised methodological limitations using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme tool; and extracted, analysed and synthesised studies' findings. We used Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation-confidence in the evidence from reviews of qualitative research to assess confidence in review findings. We integrated findings with 14 Cochrane treatment effectiveness reviews on children's chronic non-cancer pain.

Results: We synthesised 43 studies sampled from 170 eligible studies reported in 182 publications. Studies had minor (n = 24) or moderate (n = 19) methodological limitations. Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation-confidence in the evidence from reviews of qualitative research assessments of review findings were high (n = 22), moderate (n = 13) or very low confidence (n = 1). Moderate and severe chronic pain had profound adverse impacts on family members' well-being, autonomy and self-identity; family dynamics; parenting approaches; friendships and socialising; children's education and parental paid employment. Most children and families sought a biomedical cure for pain. They experienced difficulties seeking and receiving support from health services to manage pain and its impacts. Consequently, some families repeatedly visited health services. Cochrane reviews of intervention effects and trials did not measure some outcomes important to children and families, for example effects of pain on the family and resolution of pain. Reviews have mainly neglected a biopsychosocial approach when considering how interventions work.

Limitations: There were limited data on common pain conditions like migraine/headache, abdominal pain; some rarer conditions; children with learning disabilities and under-fives; siblings; fathers and experiences of treatments/services. We excluded studies on cancer, end-of-life pain and experiences of healthcare professionals.

Conclusions: We developed the family-centred theory of children's chronic pain management, integrating health and social care with community support.

Future work: Future research should explore families' experiences of services and treatments, including opioids, and social care services; experiences of children with autism and learning disabilities, under 5 years old and with certain common pain conditions. We need development and testing of family-centred interventions and services.

Study registration: This study is registered as PROSPERO (CRD42019161455) and Cochrane Pain, Palliative and Supportive Care (623).

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR128671) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 17. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

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