儿科麻醉术前焦虑管理实践:对专家和社交媒体用户在线调查的比较分析

IF 2.1 Q2 PEDIATRICS
Armin Sablewski, Christine Eimer, Marcus Nemeth, Clemens Miller
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:处理儿科麻醉术前焦虑是具有挑战性的,因为它影响患者的合作和术后结果。药物和非药物干预都被用来降低儿童的焦虑水平。然而,最佳方法仍存在争议,缺乏循证指南。医疗保健专业人员使用社交媒体作为医疗专业知识的来源,可以为他们的管理方法提供见解。目的:通过社交媒体平台传播一项针对卫生保健专业人员的公众调查,以评估儿童焦虑管理的现状。在儿科麻醉师年会上提出了同样的问题,他们的回答作为参考。主要目的是比较两组之间的儿科麻醉专业知识,而次要目标集中在确定术前焦虑管理策略的异同,假设两组之间的专业知识差异。方法:进行两次问卷调查。第一次调查的对象是2023年6月德国儿科麻醉科学工作组的100名与会者,形成了“专家组”(EG)。第二项公开调查采用滚雪球抽样的方式在社交媒体上进行传播,针对某小儿麻醉平台的关注者组成“社交媒体群”(social media Group, SG)。对24个问题的答案进行比较和统计分析。问题分为5类(小儿麻醉专业知识、代表性、结构条件、药物管理实践和非药物管理实践)。结果:共分析194例应答(EG 82例,SG 112例)。EG组比SG组表现出更多的儿科麻醉专业经验(中位数19 vs 10)。结论:尽管采用不同的方法,使用社交媒体的医疗保健专业人员在儿科麻醉方面表现出较少的专业知识,但与儿科麻醉专家相比,在术前焦虑的日常管理方面差异很小。我们的研究强调了有意义地使用社交媒体的潜力,但未来的研究应该探索社交媒体医疗保健专业人员在其他特定主题方面的知识的影响。此外,关于术前焦虑,需要进一步的建议,以帮助标准化和改善儿童的焦虑水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Preoperative Anxiety Management Practices in Pediatric Anesthesia: Comparative Analysis of an Online Survey Presented to Experts and Social Media Users.

Background: Managing preoperative anxiety in pediatric anesthesia is challenging, as it impacts patient cooperation and postoperative outcomes. Both pharmacological and nonpharmacological interventions are used to reduce children's anxiety levels. However, the optimal approach remains debated, with evidence-based guidelines still lacking. Health care professionals using social media as a source of medical expertise may offer insights into their management approaches.

Objective: A public survey targeting health care professionals was disseminated via social media platforms to evaluate current practices in anxiety management in children. The same questions were posed during an annual meeting of pediatric anesthesiologists with their responses serving as reference. The primary objective was to compare pediatric anesthesia expertise between the groups, while secondary objectives focused on identifying similarities and differences in preoperative anxiety management strategies hypothesizing expertise differences between the groups.

Methods: Two surveys were conducted. The first survey targeted 100 attendees of the German Scientific Working Group on Pediatric Anesthesia in June 2023 forming the "Expert Group" (EG). The second open survey was disseminated on social media using a snowball sampling approach, targeting followers of a pediatric anesthesia platform to form the "Social Media Group" (SG). The answers to the 24 questions were compared and statistically analyzed. Questions were grouped into 5 categories (pediatric anesthesia expertise, representativity, structural conditions, practices of pharmacological management, and practices in nonpharmacological management).

Results: A total of 194 responses were analyzed (82 in EG and 112 in SG). The EG cohort exhibited significantly greater professional experience in pediatric anesthesia than the SG cohort (median 19 vs 10 y, P<.001), higher specialist status (97.6% vs 64.6%, P<.001), and a greater pediatric anesthesia volume (43.9% vs 12% with more than 500 cases per year, P<.001). Regarding the representativity, 2 items out of 4 were statistically significant (level of care of institution, annual caseload of institution). Regarding the overall anxiety management practices used, there is a heterogeneous response pattern within both groups.

Conclusions: Despite heterogeneous approaches, health care professionals using social media demonstrated less expertise in pediatric anesthesia but showed minimal differences in the daily management of preoperative anxiety compared with pediatric anesthesia experts. Our study highlights the potential for meaningful use of social media but future studies should explore the impact of social media health care professionals' knowledge in other specific topics. Additionally, regarding preoperative anxiety, further recommendations are needed that could help to standardize and improve anxiety levels in children.

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来源期刊
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
5.40%
发文量
62
审稿时长
12 weeks
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