Efficacy of nonpharmacologic interventions in preoperative anxiety: A systematic review of systematic reviews

Author:

Agüero‐Millan Basilio1ORCID,Abajas‐Bustillo Rebeca2ORCID,Ortego‐Maté Carmen3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Servicio Cántabro de Salud Santander Spain

2. Faculty of Nursing Servicio Cántabro de Salud, Universidad de Cantabria, IDIVAL Nursing Research Group Santander Spain

3. Faculty of Nursing Universidad de Cantabria, IDIVAL Nursing Research Group Santander Spain

Abstract

AbstractAims and ObjectivesEvidence suggests that preparing patients for surgery using nonpharmacological strategies reduces their anxiety. However, there is no consensus on what the best practices are. This study aims to answer the question: Are interventions using nonpharmacological therapies effective in reducing preoperative anxiety?BackgroundPreoperative anxiety causes physiological and psychological adverse effects, with a negative effect on postoperative recovery.IntroductionAccording to the World Health Organization, between 266 and 360 million surgical procedures are performed annually worldwide, and it is estimated that more than 50% of patients will experience some degree of preoperative anxiety.DesignSystematic review of systematic reviews with results of interventions aimed at mitigating preoperative anxiety.MethodsA search was conducted for systematic reviews with meta‐analyses published between 2012 and 2021 in Medline, Scopus, Web of Science and Cochrane Library. Quality was assessed using the AMSTAR‐2 scale. The protocol was registered in PROSPERO.ResultsA total of 1016 studies were examined, of which 17 systematic reviews were selected, yielding 188 controlled trials with 16,884 participants. In adults, the most common intervention included music, followed by massage, in children virtual reality and clowns. Almost all controlled trials reported a reduction in preoperative anxiety after the intervention, of which almost half had statistically significant results.ConclusionInterventions that include music, massage and virtual reality reduce preoperative anxiety and have shown that they are cost‐effective, minimally invasive and with a low risk of adverse effects. Preoperative anxiety can be reduced through a short‐term intervention involving nursing professionals as an alternative or complement to drugs.Relevance to clinical practiceThis review suggests that nursing professionals, in collaboration with other health professionals, should continue to conduct research on the reduction in preoperative anxiety. Further research in this area is needed, to reduce heterogeneity and consolidate the results.No Patient or Public ContributionNot applied to our study, as it is a systematic review of systematic reviews.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,General Nursing

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