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术前患者准备状态对手术结果的中介作用:结构方程模型分析
Author(s) -
Torres Gian Carlo S.,
Relf Michael V.,
Tuazon Josefina A.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/jan.14339
Subject(s) - anxiety , medicine , structural equation modeling , postoperative pain , health literacy , physical therapy , surgical procedures , health care , surgery , psychiatry , statistics , mathematics , economics , economic growth
Aims To determine the mediating role of surgical readiness on patient characteristics (surgical risk, type of surgery, pre‐operative anxiety, and health literacy) and its influence on surgical outcomes (pain, postoperative complications, and surgical experience). Design Correlational, theory testing using structural equation modelling. Methods A total of 376 consecutively selected surgical patients from four tertiary hospitals were recruited and followed‐up 48–72 hr postoperatively from May–October 2017. Consenting respondents answered questionnaires measuring basic surgical information, health literacy, anxiety, surgical readiness, pain score, and surgical experience. Further, records review was conducted to identify occurrence of any postoperative complications and use of additional analgesics. Results A good fit and parsimonious model (χ 2 / df = 0.75, RMSEA = 0.00, GFI = 0.99, CFI = 1.00, PNFI = 0.50) highlighted the mediating effect of pre‐operative readiness between patient characteristics and surgical outcomes. The type of surgery (curative) influenced patient readiness, surgical complications, and use of additional postoperative analgesics. Higher health literacy negatively influenced patient readiness; can decrease the use of postoperative analgesics; and lessen postoperative pain. Further, pre‐operative anxiety decreased patient readiness and increased postoperative pain and negatively influenced the surgical experience. Conclusion Patient readiness is beyond the physiological aspect of pre‐operative preparation and it is influenced primarily by the mental and emotional state of a patient. Addressing issues such as anxiety and health literacy can improve pre‐operative readiness that can enhance pain management and surgical experience. Hence, the mediating role of readiness in improving surgical outcomes emphasizes the need to deliver a patient‐centred and individualized approach to patient preparation with a key focus on their readiness for surgery. Impact This study demonstrates the difference between preparing patients and promoting readiness for surgery. Surgical readiness requires patient‐centred approach in promoting a more engaged and confident patient who is capable to use appropriate health information and how it can lead to better surgical outcomes.