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AnteayerJournal of Clinical Nursing

The Effectiveness of Picture Books on Reducing Preoperative Anxiety in Children: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis of Randomised Controlled Trials

ABSTRACT

Background

Children experience significant psychological and physical stress during medical procedures. Picture books can help reduce anxiety by familiarising children with their upcoming procedures.

Aim

To synthesise and evaluate the effectiveness of picture books on reducing preoperative anxiety in children and their parents.

Design

A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials reported following the PRISMA guidelines.

Methods

PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) and Wanfang databases were searched from inception to January 1, 2024. This review includes randomised controlled trials published in Chinese or English that evaluate the efficacy of picture book interventions in reducing preoperative anxiety among children undergoing elective surgery. Studies were excluded if: (1) they were conference abstracts, protocols or repetitive publications; (2) they were not available in full text; (3) the data reported in the study could not be obtained from the authors; and (4) they were not published in Chinese or English. The Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool version 2.0 was used to assess the risk of bias of the included studies. Meta-analysis was conducted using Review Manager 5.4.

Results

Five studies with a total of 418 patients were included in the analysis. Picture books can significantly reduce children's preoperative anxiety (SMD = −0.57, 95% CI = −0.76 to −0.37; p < 0.001). The certainty of the evidence for the effectiveness of picture books on preoperative anxiety was considered moderate.

Conclusions

Picture books can effectively reduce preoperative anxiety in children by familiarising them with the unknown. It has shown the potential to serve as preoperative educational material for paediatric patients.

Patient or Public Contribution

Not applicable.

Relevance to Clinical Practice

This meta-analysis highlights the effectiveness of picture books in reducing preoperative anxiety in children undergoing medical procedures. Healthcare professionals should consider integrating these interventions into preoperative health education.

Trial Registration

CRD42023435105 (https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?ID=CRD42023435105)

Psychological‐Distress Factors in Patients With Breast Cancer: A Qualitative Meta‐Synthesis

ABSTRACT

Aims

To systematically review and integrate qualitative-research results pertaining to psychological distress in patients with breast cancer and to clarify its causes and drivers.

Background

Patients with breast cancer experience psychological distress in the stages of diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation, which seriously affects their quality of life. Through comprehensive qualitative research, the study comprehensively describes the experiences of patients with breast cancer to guide medical personnel in taking better care of them.

Design

A systematic review and synthesis of qualitative studies.

Methods

Qualitative studies were included if they were related to the psychological-distress experiences of patients with breast cancer. The Joanna Briggs Institute Qualitative Assessment and Review Instrument was used to appraise study quality. Data were synthesised using the Thomas and Harden method of thematic and content analysis.

Data Sources

Nine electronic databases (PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, CINAL [via EBSCO], and PsycINFO, China Knowledge Resource Integrated Database, Wanfang, Chinese Biomedical, and Weipu) were searched from inception until February 2024.

Results

Thirteen studies were included in the meta-synthesis. Four analytical themes were identified: diagnostic and therapeutic, individual, environmental, and interpersonal factors.

Conclusions

Psychological distress is a subjective feeling influenced by interactions among individual, therapeutic, environmental, and interpersonal factors, and it is commonly encountered among patients with breast cancer. Therefore, to optimise the management of psychological distress, the characteristics and external environment of patients with breast cancer should be carefully considered when delivering routine nursing care.

Impact

Patients experience psychological distress at different stages of breast cancer; however, the causes of psychological distress at different stages differ. Medical staff should implement targeted psychological-distress intervention measures based on factors relevant to different stages.

Reporting Method

The Enhancing Transparency in Reporting the Synthesis of Qualitative Research statement.

Registration

The protocol of this study has been registered in the database PROSPERO (registration ID: CRD42023417364).

Psychological distress in adult women of reproductive age at different stages after breast cancer diagnosis: A qualitative study

Abstract

Aim

To explore the actual experience of psychological distress of adult women of reproductive age at different stages after breast cancer diagnosis.

Design

Qualitative.

Methods

Eighty-one patients with breast cancer-related distress thermometer scores >4 were selected using a purposive sampling method. Patients were divided into newly diagnosed and 1-, 3-, 6-, 9- and 12-month groups according to time since diagnosis and then interviewed. A phenomenological approach was adopted to analyse interview content, and different themes were extracted.

Results

Women exhibited different levels of psychological distress depending on the time since diagnosis, with newly diagnosed patients showing the highest distress. Within 1 year post-diagnosis, different events caused patients distress. Themes extracted at new diagnosis and 1-, 3-, 6-, 9- and 12 months post-diagnosis included sadness and disbelief, loss of control, optimistic but concerned, physical and mental exhaustion, difficulties returning to society and limited sexual intimacy, respectively; all groups expressed reproductive concerns.

Conclusion

Clinical nurses should focus on different psychologically distressing events to provide targeted interventions at distinct phases. For women of childbearing age, clinical nurses should pay particular attention to patients' marriage and reproductive concerns.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

During the year after a breast cancer diagnosis, patients of childbearing age experience events that cause psychological distress that differ depending on time since diagnosis. Nurses should focus on core stressful events and perform specific nursing interventions.

Impact

To provide holistic care, nurses should consider the psychological and emotional changes patients may undergo. For women of childbearing age, clinical nurses should pay particular attention to patients' marriage and fertility concerns, and be able to provide evidence-based professional guidance on reproductive preservation techniques.

Reporting Method

The study was reported using the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research guidelines.

Patient or Public Contribution

Patients contributed to data collection through interviews.

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