Experiences, symptoms and signs in 3-11 year old children undergoing day surgery within the context of the perioperative dialogue
Abstract
Surgical interventions create real, imagined, or potential fear or anxiety in many children,
thus highlighting a need for the health professionals who work with them to increasingly act
as facilitators. The overall aim of the present thesis was to gain a deeper understanding of
3-11 year-old children’s perioperative symptoms, signs, experiences and main concerns when
attending hospital for day surgery and of how they manage this situation. Paper I explores
bodily and verbal expressions of postoperative symptoms using a qualitative and descriptive
methodology. Fourteen boys between 3-6 years of age were interviewed and observed. The
participant observation method was the primary source of data and the domains and subdomains
together showed how bodily and verbal expressions could be intertwined. For boys
of this age, distinguishing pain, nausea and distress is diffi cult, and they also have different
ways of communicating the ‘correct’ words in clarifying a symptom. For paper II, a grounded
theory (GT) study was carried out based on data from 15 boys and 5 girls (aged 6-9 years)
scheduled for day surgery. The aim was to explore what it means for children to attend hospital
for day surgery. Data were collected using tape-recorded interviews, participant observations
and pre- and postoperative drawings. The analysis showed that the main concern for children
undergoing day surgery was that they were forced into an unpredictable and distressful situation.They perceived a “breaking away from daily routines” and were “facing an unknown reality”. A conceptual model was generated, including a core category, “enduring infl icted
hospital stress”, which explains how the situation was handled. Initially, the children tried to “gain control” over the situation. However, during the perioperative period they experienced a “loss of control” and “cooperated despite fear and pain”. Post-operatively they “breathed a sigh of relief” and tried to “regain normality in life” again. Paper III presents a psychometric test of the Swedish version of the Child Drawing: Hospital
Manual (CD:H), which intends to assess hospital anxiety in children. Drawings from 59
children (aged 5-11) undergoing day surgery were analyzed and compared to drawings from
71 school children (aged 5–11) in a comparison group. The results showed that the Swedish version of the CD:H has adequate construct validity (Parts A, C and total scale score), high inter-rater reliability and acceptable internal consistency reliability. In paper IV, the effi cacy of the perioperative dialogue was investigated by analysing salivary cortisol in 5-11 year old children undergoing day surgery. Seventy-nine boys and 14 girls (n=93) scheduled for day
surgery were randomly recruited into three groups with different types of perioperative care: Standard perioperative care (control group) (n=31), Standard perioperative care including preoperative information (n=31), and the Perioperative Dialogue (PD) (n=31). Postoperatively, the PD group had signifi cantly lower saliva cortisol concentrations than the other two groups and these levels continuously decreased during the day of surgery. Among the children who received analgesics, the PD group received signifi cantly less morphine related to bodyweight.
Irrespective of group, there was a positive correlation between morphine consumption and
salivary cortisol concentration. In paper V, associations between objective measures of stress (cortisol concentration in saliva) and subjective assessment of hospital anxiety (children’s drawings) are investigated. The sample included 93 children (79 boys and 14 girls) scheduled for elective day surgery requiring general anaesthesia. The results showed no signifi cant associations
between children’s saliva cortisol concentration (stress) and their drawings (anxiety) in any of the parts of the CD:H or individual items. In conclusion, the studies contribute to a deeper understanding of how 3-11 year-old children undergoing day surgery experience and express their situation, symptoms and physiological stress in the context of the PD. Keywords; anxiety, children, cortisol, day surgery, drawings, nursing, perioperative dialogue,
stress, symptoms
Parts of work
I) Wennström, B. & Bergh I. (2008). Bodily and verbal expressions of postoperative symptoms in 3- to 6 -year old boys. Journal of Pediatric Nursing, 23
(1), 65-76. ::pmid::18207049 II) Wennström, B., Hallberg, L. R-M. & Bergh, I. (2008). Use of perioperative dialogues with children undergoing day surgery. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 62 (1), 96-106. ::pmid::18352968 III) Wennström, B., Nasic, S., Hedelin, H. & Bergh, I. (2011). Evaluation of the Swedish version of the Child Drawing: Hospital Manual. Journal of Advanced
Nursing, 67(5), 1118-1128. ::pmid::21214620 IV) Wennström, B., Törnhage, C-J., Nasic, S., Hedelin, H. & Bergh, I. (2011). The perioperative dialogue reduces postoperative stress in children undergoing day surgery as confi rmed by salivary cortisol. Pediatric Anesthesia, (21), 1058-1065. ::pmid::21771174 V) Wennström, B., Törnhage, C-J., Hedelin, H., Nasic, S. & Bergh, I. (2011). Child drawings and saliva cortisol in children undergoing preoperative procedures associated with day surgery (Submitted).
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Health Care Sciences)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Health and Care Sciences
Disputation
Fredagen den 11 november 2011, kl. 13.00, Hörsal Arvid Carlsson, Medicinaregatan 3, Göteborg
Date of defence
2011-11-11
berith.wennstroem@telia.com
Date
2011-12-21Author
Wennström, Berith
Keywords
anxiety
children
cortisol
day surgery
drawings
nursing
perioperative dialogue
stress
symptoms
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-8364-5
Language
eng