头痛心理学家在儿童和成人头痛护理中的作用:对专业从业者的定性研究。

IF 1.6 3区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Amy S Grinberg, Teresa M Damush, Hayley Lindsey, Laura Burrone, Sean Baird, Stanley Curtis Takagishi, Ivy Snyder, Roberta E Goldman, Jason J Sico, Elizabeth K Seng
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:我们研究了头痛专家心理学家的观点,为将头痛心理学家纳入医疗环境中照顾患有头痛障碍的儿童和成人提供最佳实践。背景:头痛是一种常见的、慢性的、致残性的神经系统疾病。作为受过循证行为改变干预培训的临床提供者,头痛心理学家在提供行为性头痛治疗方面具有独特的地位。方法:2020年,我们对美国各地的头痛专家心理学家进行了半结构化访谈。开放式问题集中于他们的角色、临床流程和治疗内容。访谈采用快速定性分析方法进行录音、转录、去识别和分析。结果:我们采访了7位头痛专家心理学家,他们在门诊环境中平均工作了18年 = 4) 和成人(n = 3) 头痛患者。临床工作流程中出现的主题与行为性头痛治疗的关键组成部分、有效的行为治疗转诊实践以及患者参与的障碍有关。头痛专家心理学家提供了基于证据的行为性头痛干预措施,如生物反馈、放松训练和认知行为疗法,强调将改变生活方式作为独立选择,或与药物治疗同时进行,且持续时间短。参与者报告说,他们的许多患者似乎不愿意寻求头痛的行为治疗。参与者认为,当转诊提供者向患者解释行为治疗的基本原理、治疗内容以及对头痛活动、功能和生活质量的积极影响时,转诊最有效。参与者指出,将头痛心理学纳入头痛护理的障碍包括缺乏受过专门头痛培训的心理学家,缺乏保险报销,患者寻求行为治疗的时间有限,以及患者对行为治疗的知识不足。结论:头痛心理学家通常是提供短期循证行为干预的多学科头痛团队的核心成员,无论是作为独立治疗还是与药物治疗相结合。然而,护理障碍依然存在。提高转诊提供者对心理学家在头痛护理中的作用的熟悉程度,可能有助于成功转诊头痛行为干预。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Headache Psychologists' Role in Pediatric and Adult Headache Care: A Qualitative Study of Expert Practitioners.

Objective: We examined the perspectives of expert headache psychologists to inform best practices for integrating headache psychologists into the care of children and adults with headache disorders within medical settings.

Background: Headache disorders are prevalent, chronic, and disabling neurological conditions. As clinical providers trained in evidence-based behavior change interventions with expertise in headache disorders, headache psychologists are uniquely positioned to provide behavioral headache treatment.

Methods: In 2020, we conducted semi-structured interviews with a purposive sample of expert headache psychologists working across the United States. Open-ended questions focused on their roles, clinical flow, and treatment content. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, de-identified, and analyzed using a rapid qualitative analysis method.

Results: We interviewed seven expert headache psychologists who have worked for an average of 18 years in outpatient settings with pediatric (n = 4) and adult (n = 3) patients with headache. The themes that emerged across the clinical workflow related to key components of behavioral headache treatment, effective behavioral treatment referral practices, and barriers to patient engagement. The expert headache psychologists offered evidence-based behavioral headache interventions such as biofeedback, relaxation training, and cognitive behavioral therapy emphasizing lifestyle modification as standalone options or concurrently with pharmacological treatment and were of brief duration. Participants reported many of their patients appeared reluctant to seek behavioral treatment for headache. Participants believed referrals were most effective when the referring provider explained to the patient the rationale for behavioral treatment, treatment content, and positive impact on headache activity, functioning, and quality of life. Barriers cited by participants to integrating headache psychology into headache care included the paucity of psychologists with specialized headache training, lack of insurance reimbursement, limited patient time to seek behavioral treatment, and inadequate patient knowledge of what behavioral treatment entails.

Conclusion: Headache psychologists are often core members of multidisciplinary headache teams offering short-term, evidence-based behavioral interventions, both as a standalone treatment or in conjunction with pharmacotherapy. However, barriers to care persist. Enhancing referring providers' familiarity with psychologists' role in headache care may aid successful referrals for behavioral interventions for headache.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
4.50%
发文量
93
期刊介绍: Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings is an international forum for the publication of peer-reviewed original papers related to all areas of the science and practice of psychologists in medical settings. Manuscripts are chosen that have a broad appeal across psychology as well as other health care disciplines, reflecting varying backgrounds, interests, and specializations. The journal publishes original research, treatment outcome trials, meta-analyses, literature reviews, conceptual papers, brief scientific reports, and scholarly case studies. Papers accepted address clinical matters in medical settings; integrated care; health disparities; education and training of the future psychology workforce; interdisciplinary collaboration, training, and professionalism; licensing, credentialing, and privileging in hospital practice; research and practice ethics; professional development of psychologists in academic health centers; professional practice matters in medical settings; and cultural, economic, political, regulatory, and systems factors in health care. In summary, the journal provides a forum for papers predicted to have significant theoretical or practical importance for the application of psychology in medical settings.
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