脑肿瘤治疗后儿童日常生活功能问题的趋势:根据专业记录。

IF 1.4
A-C Björklund, A-I Coci, M Granlund, S J Santacroce, L Darcy, L Augustine, M Björk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:完成脑肿瘤治疗的儿童会遇到持续的功能问题,这些问题随着时间的推移而波动。先前的研究表明,医疗保健和学校往往更关注儿童与癌症相关的身体症状,而不是关注参与和管理日常生活活动的现有问题,更不用说他们面临的环境障碍。很少有研究涉及儿童的问题是如何在身体、活动和参与水平上共同发生并随着时间的推移而呈现出来的。因此,本研究的目的是描述在完成脑肿瘤治疗的儿童中记录的功能问题是如何随时间变化的。方法:回顾了7名儿童在治疗结束后长达5年的医疗和学校记录,以确定问题并将其与国际功能、残疾和健康分类(ICF)代码域联系起来。编码的数据在4年的时间里被分成6个月的块,进行统计分析和图表说明。使用协作解决问题(CPS)方法,在儿童案例中举例说明了群体层面上的代码变化以及身体、活动和环境代码模式,这些代码暂时与参与共同发生。结果:根据参与、活动、身体和环境中编码的中位数(Md),儿童表现出持续的身体功能问题(Md 11-18)。活动相关问题在治疗结束后1年最为明显(Md 6),参与问题(Md 1-2)在整个随访期间持续存在。环境问题的文件记录有限,但3年后增加了(Md 3)。在儿童案例中,自我照顾、学校教育和同伴关系方面的参与问题持续多年,其合理的解释与沟通和精细手功能(活动)、疲劳(身体功能)以及周围支持系统(环境)的问题有关。结论:随着时间的推移,专业人员的记录主要集中在儿童的身体功能问题上,而日常生活中的功能和影响参与的环境障碍往往被忽视。通过使用ICF和CPS,为包括护士在内的服务专业人员提供了全面和系统的方法指导,以解决与功能共存的问题模式,这可能会改善对儿童参与日常生活的支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Trends of Problems with Functioning in Everyday Life for Children Post Brain Tumor Treatment: As Documented in Professional Records.

Background: Children who complete brain tumor treatment encounter ongoing problems with functioning that fluctuate over time. Previous studies shows that health care and schools tend to focus more on the child's cancer-related body symptoms, rather than on existing problems to participate and manage everyday life activities, or moreover of environmental barriers they face. Few studies address how the child's problems to function on body, activity and participation levels co-occur and are presented over time. Therefore, this study´s purpose is to describe how documented problems with functioning, vary over time in children who have completed brain tumor treatment.

Methods: Medical and school records from seven children were reviewed for up to 5 years after treatment completion, to identify problems and link these to International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) code domains. The coded data were divided into six-month blocks over a 4-year time period, analyzed statistically and illustrated graphically. Code variations on group-levels and patterns of body, activity and environmental codes that tentatively co-occurred with participation were exemplified in a child-case, using a collaborative problem-solving (CPS) approach.

Results: Based on median (Md) number of codes within participation, activity, body and environment, the children exhibited ongoing problems with body function over time (Md 11-18). Activity-related problems were most noticeable about 1-year post-treatment completion (Md 6), and participation problems (Md 1-2) persisted throughout the follow-up period. Documentation of environmental problems was limited but increased after 3 years (Md 3). In the child-case example, participation problems with self-care, schooling and peer-relations continued across the years, with plausible explanations related to problems with communication and fine-hand function (activity), fatigue (body function) and with surrounding supportive systems (environment).

Conclusion: Over time, professionals' documentation predominantly focused on problems with the child's body function, while functioning in everyday life and environmental barriers affecting participation, was often neglected. By using the ICF and CPS, service professionals, including nurses, are provided with guidance for comprehensive and systematic approach of addressing patterns of co-occurring problems with functioning, which could lead to improved support to optimize the child's participation in everyday life.

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