表面活性剂的动物起源:新生儿科医生对父母信息共享的认知和实践的调查

Sean M. Bailey, K. Hendricks-Muñoz, P. Mally
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引用次数: 4

摘要

通常用于治疗各种新生儿呼吸系统疾病的外源性表面活性剂来源于牛或猪。目前尚不清楚父母对这一事实的了解程度,以及这可能对家庭文化或宗教信仰体系产生的影响。我们的主要目的是评估美国新生儿医生对牛和猪表面活性剂制剂的使用情况,他们对外源性表面活性剂治疗的特定动物来源的父母披露的看法,以及他们根据父母的宗教偏好提供替代表面活性剂制剂的意愿。一项匿名的网络调查提供给2137名新生儿学家。应答率为46.9%。我们发现63.4%的受访者只使用牛源性表面活性剂,14.9%的受访者只使用猪源性表面活性剂,21.7%的受访者使用复合表面活性剂。74.3%的新生儿医生会与父母讨论表面活性剂的使用,但只有2.2%的医生会讨论表面活性剂的动物来源。当被问及这一问题时,47.9%的新生儿科医生认为父母出于宗教原因的偏好不会影响他们对表面活性剂的选择,19.4%的人表示会影响他们的选择,32.7%的人表示可能会。只有一种表面活性剂是沟通的主要障碍。结果表明,许多新生儿科医生可能对表面活性剂治疗的家长持开放态度。在医院药房处方中使用不同类型的表面活性剂,并鼓励医生与家长沟通,可以实现以家庭为中心的新生儿护理方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Animal Origins of Surfactant: A Survey of Neonatologists’ Perceptions and Practices Regarding Parent Information Sharing
Exogenous surfactants commonly used to treat a variety of neonatal respiratory diseases are derived from either bovine or porcine sources. The extent to which parents are aware of this fact is currently unclear, as is the impact that this may have on familial cultural or religious belief systems. Our primary aims were to assess U.S. neonatologists’ utilization of bovine and porcine surfactant preparations, their views on parent disclosure pertaining to the particular animal origins of exogenous surfactant therapy, and their willingness to provide alternative surfactant preparations based on parental religious preferences. An anonymous Web-based survey was provided to 2,137 neonatologists. There was a 46.9% response rate. We found that 63.4% of respondents used only bovine-derived surfactants, 14.9% exclusively used porcine-based surfactants, and 21.7% used combinations. While 74.3% of neonatologists discussed surfactant use with parents, only 2.2% always discussed its animal origins. When asked, 47.9% of neonatologists believed parental preference for religious reasons would not impact their surfactant choice, 19.4% reported it would affect their choice, and 32.7% said it maybe would. Access to only one surfactant was a major barrier to communication. Results showed that many neonatologists may be open to being inclusive of parents regarding surfactant therapy. Carrying different surfactant types on hospital pharmacy formularies and encouraging physician–parent communication may achieve a more family-centered approach to neonatal care.
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