Powell Rachael, Scott Neil W, Manyande Anne, Bruce Julie, Vögele Claus, Byrne-Davis Lucie M T, Unsworth Mary, Osmer Christian, Johnston Marie
School of Psychological Sciences and Manchester Centre for Health Psychology, University of Manchester, Coupland 1 Building, Oxford Road, Manchester, UK, M13 9PL.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 May 26;2016(5):CD008646. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008646.pub2.
In a review and meta-analysis conducted in 1993, psychological preparation was found to be beneficial for a range of outcome variables including pain, behavioural recovery, length of stay and negative affect. Since this review, more detailed bibliographic searching has become possible, additional studies testing psychological preparation for surgery have been completed and hospital procedures have changed. The present review examines whether psychological preparation (procedural information, sensory information, cognitive intervention, relaxation, hypnosis and emotion-focused intervention) has impact on the outcomes of postoperative pain, behavioural recovery, length of stay and negative affect.
To review the effects of psychological preparation on postoperative outcomes in adults undergoing elective surgery under general anaesthetic.
We searched the Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL 2014, Issue 5), MEDLINE (OVID SP) (1950 to May 2014), EMBASE (OVID SP) (1982 to May 2014), PsycINFO (OVID SP) (1982 to May 2014), CINAHL (EBESCOhost) (1980 to May 2014), Dissertation Abstracts (to May 2014) and Web of Science (1946 to May 2014). We searched reference lists of relevant studies and contacted authors to identify unpublished studies. We reran the searches in July 2015 and placed the 38 studies of interest in the `awaiting classification' section of this review.
We included randomized controlled trials of adult participants (aged 16 or older) undergoing elective surgery under general anaesthesia. We excluded studies focusing on patient groups with clinically diagnosed psychological morbidity. We did not limit the search by language or publication status. We included studies testing a preoperative psychological intervention that included at least one of these seven techniques: procedural information; sensory information; behavioural instruction; cognitive intervention; relaxation techniques; hypnosis; emotion-focused intervention. We included studies that examined any one of our postoperative outcome measures (pain, behavioural recovery, length of stay, negative affect) within one month post-surgery.
One author checked titles and abstracts to exclude obviously irrelevant studies. We obtained full reports of apparently relevant studies; two authors fully screened these. Two authors independently extracted data and resolved discrepancies by discussion.Where possible we used random-effects meta-analyses to combine the results from individual studies. For length of stay we pooled mean differences. For pain and negative affect we used a standardized effect size (the standardized mean difference (SMD), or Hedges' g) to combine data from different outcome measures. If data were not available in a form suitable for meta-analysis we performed a narrative review.
Searches identified 5116 unique papers; we retrieved 827 for full screening. In this review, we included 105 studies from 115 papers, in which 10,302 participants were randomized. Mainly as a result of updating the search in July 2015, 38 papers are awaiting classification. Sixty-one of the 105 studies measured the outcome pain, 14 behavioural recovery, 58 length of stay and 49 negative affect. Participants underwent a wide range of surgical procedures, and a range of psychological components were used in interventions, frequently in combination. In the 105 studies, appropriate data were provided for the meta-analysis of 38 studies measuring the outcome postoperative pain (2713 participants), 36 for length of stay (3313 participants) and 31 for negative affect (2496 participants). We narratively reviewed the remaining studies (including the 14 studies with 1441 participants addressing behavioural recovery). When pooling the results for all types of intervention there was low quality evidence that psychological preparation techniques were associated with lower postoperative pain (SMD -0.20, 95% confidence interval (CI) -0.35 to -0.06), length of stay (mean difference -0.52 days, 95% CI -0.82 to -0.22) and negative affect (SMD -0.35, 95% CI -0.54 to -0.16) compared with controls. Results tended to be similar for all categories of intervention, although there was no evidence that behavioural instruction reduced the outcome pain. However, caution must be exercised when interpreting the results because of heterogeneity in the types of surgery, interventions and outcomes. Narratively reviewed evidence for the outcome behavioural recovery provided very low quality evidence that psychological preparation, in particular behavioural instruction, may have potential to improve behavioural recovery outcomes, but no clear conclusions could be reached.Generally, the evidence suffered from poor reporting, meaning that few studies could be classified as having low risk of bias. Overall,we rated the quality of evidence for each outcome as 'low' because of the high level of heterogeneity in meta-analysed studies and the unclear risk of bias. In addition, for the outcome behavioural recovery, too few studies used robust measures and reported suitable data for meta-analysis, so we rated the quality of evidence as `very low'.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The evidence suggested that psychological preparation may be beneficial for the outcomes postoperative pain, behavioural recovery, negative affect and length of stay, and is unlikely to be harmful. However, at present, the strength of evidence is insufficient to reach firm conclusions on the role of psychological preparation for surgery. Further analyses are needed to explore the heterogeneity in the data, to identify more specifically when intervention techniques are of benefit. As the current evidence quality is low or very low, there is a need for well-conducted and clearly reported research.
在1993年进行的一项综述和荟萃分析中,发现心理准备对一系列结果变量有益,包括疼痛、行为恢复、住院时间和负面情绪。自该综述以来,更详细的文献检索成为可能,更多测试手术心理准备的研究已完成,且医院程序也发生了变化。本综述探讨心理准备(程序信息、感觉信息、认知干预、放松、催眠和情绪聚焦干预)是否对术后疼痛、行为恢复、住院时间和负面情绪的结果有影响。
综述心理准备对接受全身麻醉的择期手术成年患者术后结果的影响。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验注册库(CENTRAL 2014年第5期)、MEDLINE(OVID SP)(1950年至2014年5月)、EMBASE(OVID SP)(1982年至2014年5月)、PsycINFO(OVID SP)(1982年至2014年5月)、CINAHL(EBESCOhost)(1980年至2014年5月)、学位论文摘要(至2014年5月)和科学引文索引(1946年至2014年5月)。我们检索了相关研究的参考文献列表并联系作者以识别未发表的研究。我们在2015年7月重新进行了检索,并将38项感兴趣的研究放入本综述的“等待分类”部分。
我们纳入了成年参与者(16岁及以上)接受全身麻醉下择期手术的随机对照试验。我们排除了专注于临床诊断有心理疾病患者群体的研究。我们没有按语言或发表状态限制检索。我们纳入了测试术前心理干预的研究,该干预包括以下七种技术中的至少一种:程序信息;感觉信息;行为指导;认知干预;放松技术;催眠;情绪聚焦干预。我们纳入了在术后一个月内检查我们任何一项术后结果指标(疼痛、行为恢复、住院时间、负面情绪)的研究。
一位作者检查标题和摘要以排除明显不相关的研究。我们获取了明显相关研究的完整报告;两位作者对这些进行了全面筛选。两位作者独立提取数据并通过讨论解决差异。在可能的情况下,我们使用随机效应荟萃分析来合并各个研究的结果。对于住院时间,我们汇总平均差异。对于疼痛和负面情绪,我们使用标准化效应量(标准化平均差(SMD)或Hedges' g)来合并来自不同结果指标的数据。如果数据不是以适合荟萃分析的形式提供,我们进行叙述性综述。
检索识别出5116篇独特的论文;我们检索了827篇进行全面筛选。在本综述中,我们纳入了来自115篇论文的105项研究,其中10302名参与者被随机分组。主要由于在2015年7月更新了检索,38篇论文正在等待分类。105项研究中的61项测量了疼痛结果,14项测量了行为恢复,58项测量了住院时间,49项测量了负面情绪。参与者接受了广泛的外科手术,干预中使用了一系列心理成分,且经常组合使用。在105项研究中,为38项测量术后疼痛结果的研究(2713名参与者)、36项测量住院时间的研究(3313名参与者)和31项测量负面情绪的研究(2496名参与者)的荟萃分析提供了适当的数据。我们对其余研究(包括14项涉及行为恢复的1441名参与者的研究)进行了叙述性综述。当汇总所有类型干预的结果时,有低质量证据表明与对照组相比,心理准备技术与较低的术后疼痛(SMD -0.20,95%置信区间(CI)-0.35至-0.06)、住院时间(平均差异-0.52天,95% CI -0.82至-0.22)和负面情绪(SMD -0.35,95% CI -0.54至-0.16)相关。所有干预类别结果往往相似,尽管没有证据表明行为指导能减轻疼痛结果。然而,由于手术类型、干预措施和结果存在异质性,在解释结果时必须谨慎。对行为恢复结果的叙述性综述提供了非常低质量的证据,表明心理准备,特别是行为指导,可能有改善行为恢复结果的潜力,但无法得出明确结论。总体而言,证据报告质量较差,这意味着很少有研究可被归类为偏倚风险低。总体而言,由于荟萃分析研究中的高度异质性和偏倚风险不明确,我们将每个结果的证据质量评为“低”。此外,对于行为恢复结果,使用可靠测量方法并报告适合荟萃分析数据的研究太少,因此我们将证据质量评为“非常低”。
证据表明心理准备可能对术后疼痛、行为恢复、负面情绪和住院时间的结果有益,且不太可能有害。然而,目前,证据强度不足以就手术心理准备的作用得出确凿结论。需要进一步分析以探索数据中的异质性,更具体地确定干预技术何时有益。由于当前证据质量低或非常低,需要进行开展良好且报告清晰的研究。