What Postoperative Outcomes Matter to Pediatric Patients?

Children are often excluded from making decisions related to their medical treatment, and parents’ proxy reports are often used. This approach fails to consider that parents and children may differ in their perception of the child’s health. In this study, we assessed children’s decision-making proce...

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Veröffentlicht in:Anesthesia and analgesia 2006-05, Vol.102 (5), p.1376-1382
Hauptverfasser: Cucchiaro, Giovanni, Farrar, John T., Guite, Jessica W., Li, Yuelin
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container_end_page 1382
container_issue 5
container_start_page 1376
container_title Anesthesia and analgesia
container_volume 102
creator Cucchiaro, Giovanni
Farrar, John T.
Guite, Jessica W.
Li, Yuelin
description Children are often excluded from making decisions related to their medical treatment, and parents’ proxy reports are often used. This approach fails to consider that parents and children may differ in their perception of the child’s health. In this study, we assessed children’s decision-making processes related to postoperative pain management. Forty-five children who underwent an anterior cruciate ligament repair or Nuss procedure for pectus excavatum repair were studied. A standard gamble technique was used to assess children’s perceptions of the utility of a hypothetical treatment that would provide them with perfect pain control, with respect to different rates of risk for vomiting during the postoperative period. The maximum risk of vomiting that the overall study population was willing to accept to decrease the pain level to zero was 32% ± 24%. Girls were willing to take a significantly higher risk (41% ± 24%) compared to boys (25% ± 22%) (P = 0.02). Children who actually experienced vomiting before they were questioned were willing to take a higher risk (46% ± 26%) compared to those who did not (23% ± 17%) (P = 0.035). Children can express opinions about preferred postoperative outcomes and provide useful input about their care. Girls, more than boys, seem to perceive vomiting as less important than improved pain control in the postoperative period.
doi_str_mv 10.1213/01.ane.0000204251.36881.80
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Intensive care medicine. Transfusions. 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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid LWW Legacy Archive; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Adolescent
Analgesia, Patient-Controlled - psychology
Analgesia, Patient-Controlled - statistics & numerical data
Anesthesia
Anesthesia. Intensive care medicine. Transfusions. Cell therapy and gene therapy
Biological and medical sciences
Chi-Square Distribution
Child
Decision Making
Female
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Multivariate Analysis
Pain, Postoperative - epidemiology
Pain, Postoperative - prevention & control
Pain, Postoperative - psychology
Postoperative Period
Statistics, Nonparametric
Treatment Outcome
title What Postoperative Outcomes Matter to Pediatric Patients?
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