Family-centered Preparation for Surgery Improves Perioperative Outcomes in Children

Author:

Kain Zeev N.1,Caldwell-Andrews Alison A.2,Mayes Linda C.3,Weinberg Megan E.4,Wang Shu-Ming5,MacLaren Jill E.6,Blount Ronald L.7

Affiliation:

1. Vice-Chair and Professor of Anesthesiology and Pediatrics and Child Psychiatry, Center for the Advancement of Perioperative Health and the Departments of Anesthesiology, Pediatrics, and Child Psychiatry.

2. Associate Research Scientist.

3. Arnold Gesell Professor of Child Psychiatry, Pediatrics and Psychology, Departments of Pediatrics and Child Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.

4. Research Assistant.

5. Associate Professor of Anesthesiology, Center for the Advancement of Perioperative Health and the Department of Anesthesiology.

6. Post-Doctoral Associate, Departments of Anesthesiology and Child Psychiatry, Center for the Advancement of Perioperative Health.

7. Associate Professor of Psychology, The University of Georgia Department of Psychology, Athens, Georgia.

Abstract

Background Children and parents experience significant anxiety and distress during the preoperative period. Currently available interventions are having limited efficacy. Based on an integration of the literature in both the anesthesia and psychological milieus, the authors developed a behaviorally oriented perioperative preparation program for children undergoing surgery that targets the family as a whole. Methods Children and their parents (n = 408) were randomly assigned to one of four groups: (1) control: received standard of care; (2) parental presence: received standard parental presence during induction of anesthesia; (3) ADVANCE: received family-centered behavioral preparation; and (4) oral midazolam. The authors assessed the effect of group assignment on preoperative anxiety levels and postoperative outcomes such as analgesic consumption and emergence delirium. Results Parents and children in the ADVANCE group exhibited significantly lower anxiety in the holding area as compared with all three other groups (34.4+/-16 vs. 39.7+/-15; P=0.007) and were less anxious during induction of anesthesia as compared with the control and parental presence groups (44.9+/-22 vs. 51.6+/-25 and 53.6+/-25, respectively; P=0.006). Anxiety and compliance during induction of anesthesia was similar for children in both the ADVANCE and midazolam groups (44.9+/-22 vs. 42.9+/-24; P=0.904). Children in the ADVANCE group exhibited a lower incidence of emergence delirium after surgery (P=0.038), required significantly less analgesia in the recovery room (P=0.016), and were discharged from the recovery room earlier (P=0.04) as compared with children in the three other groups. Conclusion The family-centered preoperative ADVANCE preparation program is effective in the reduction of preoperative anxiety and improvement in postoperative outcomes.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference45 articles.

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