危重病专科护士认识到初级姑息治疗的现状和障碍:日本全国横断面问卷调查。

Akane Kato, Yuta Tanaka, Yoshiyuki Kizawa, Hiroaki Yamase, Asami Tado, Junko Tatsuno, Mitsunori Miyashita
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:调查日本重症监护机构初级姑息治疗实践的现状,确定被认为等同于初级姑息治疗的护理,并探讨障碍。方法:采用定量描述性问卷调查,在全国范围内采用横断面设计,涉及740名重症专科护士。结果:共收到问卷384份,回复率为51.9%。护士认为为癌症患者提供的典型姑息治疗,如“缓解生命末期的痛苦”(95.3%)、“疼痛管理”(88.8%)和“照顾患者的心理痛苦”(88.3%),是危重病护理环境中的主要姑息治疗。他们还较少地认识到“谵妄的监测和管理”(68.5%),“照顾患者的社会痛苦”(63.5%)和“预防重症监护后综合症”(61.7%)是重症监护环境中初级姑息治疗的方面。此外,急诊科护士的认知度低于重症监护病房护士。护士承认整体姑息治疗实践不足,特别是在患者的社会(72.1%)和精神(76.8%)痛苦方面。他们认为“重症监护医务人员的知识和技能不足”(70.6%)和“无法确认患者对治疗目标的偏好”(54.4%)是提供初级姑息治疗的障碍。护士较少认识到的障碍是“重症监护环境中姑息治疗的不确定性”(6.8%)和“护理团队在提供姑息治疗方面存在分歧”(8.3%)。结论:专科护士了解姑息治疗,但由于知识有限,对初级姑息治疗缺乏准备。日本的重症护理机构需要改进初级姑息治疗和患者与家属沟通方面的教育。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Current Status of and Barriers to Primary Palliative Care Recognized by Critical Care Specialist Nurses: A Nationwide Cross-Sectional Questionnaire Survey in Japan.

Objectives: To investigate the current state of primary palliative care practice in Japanese critical care settings, identify care perceived as equivalent to primary palliative care, and explore the barriers. Methods: We employed a quantitative descriptive questionnaire survey with a nationwide cross-sectional design involving 740 critical care specialist nurses. Results: Questionnaires were received from 384 nurses, yielding a response rate of 51.9%. Nurses recognized typical palliative care provided to cancer patients, such as "relieving suffering at end-of-life" (95.3%), "pain management" (88.8%), and "caring for patients' psychological suffering" (88.3%), as primary palliative care in the critical care setting. They also recognized "monitoring and management of delirium" (68.5%), "caring for patients' social suffering" (63.5%), and "preventing post-intensive care syndromes" (61.7%) less frequently as aspects of primary palliative care in critical care settings. Additionally, the recognition was lower among emergency department nurses than intensive care unit nurses. The nurses recognized inadequate overall palliative care practices, especially regarding patients' social (72.1%) and spiritual (76.8%) suffering. They recognized "insufficient knowledge and skills among critical care medical staff" (70.6%) and "unable to confirm the patients' preferences to treatment goals" (54.4%) as barriers to providing primary palliative care. The barriers that nurses recognized less often were "uncertainty about palliative care in critical care settings" (6.8%) and "disagreements among nursing teams regarding providing palliative care" (8.3%). Conclusion: Specialist nurses understood palliative care but felt unprepared in primary palliative care due to limited knowledge. Improved education in primary palliative care and patient-family communication is needed in Japan's critical care settings.

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