Anxiety and it's management during awake procedures in operating theatres. A survey and randomised controlled trial.

This study investigates the prevalence of peri-operative anxiety and the effective management of intra-operative anxiety during awake surgery. Plastic and vascular surgical patients were selected for the study as many procedures performed within these specialities are performed under local or region...

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Main Author: Marran, Jayne
Other Authors: Newell, Robert J.
Language:en
Published: University of Bradford 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4875
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-48752019-09-24T03:02:03Z Anxiety and it's management during awake procedures in operating theatres. A survey and randomised controlled trial. Marran, Jayne Newell, Robert J. Plews, Caroline M.C. Peri-operative Local anaesthesia Regional anaesthesia Intra-operative Interventions Anxiety Randomised controlled trial Survey Surgery This study investigates the prevalence of peri-operative anxiety and the effective management of intra-operative anxiety during awake surgery. Plastic and vascular surgical patients were selected for the study as many procedures performed within these specialities are performed under local or regional anaesthesia. The study consists of two distinct stages. The first stage was a postal survey of patients (n=213) who had undergone awake plastic, renal access or carotid surgery up to two weeks previously, in order to determine retrospectively the prevalence of peri-operative anxiety. The second stage of the study was a randomised controlled trial of interventions for the effective management of intra-operative anxiety in patients (n=128) having undergone the same surgical procedures described in stage one. The interventions tested in stage two were handholding and an anxiety management package involving a relaxation technique and a procedural information leaflet, against a ¿usual care¿ control. The findings from stage one of the study suggest that peri-operative anxiety prevalence is low, although unacceptable levels of anxiety are seen to elevate during the intra-operative phase. The RCT in stage two demonstrated that intra-operative anxiety was no more effectively managed by the interventions tested than by usual care alone. The validity and reliability of retrospective anxiety measurement was investigated by comparing anxiety scores from stage one with contemporaneous and post-hoc anxiety scores from stage two and found to be an accurate measure of anxiety experienced at the time of the event. 2011-05-11T14:50:19Z 2011-05-11T14:50:19Z 2011-05-11 2010 Thesis doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4875 en <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/"><img alt="Creative Commons License" style="border-width:0" src="http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-nd/3.0/88x31.png" /></a><br />The University of Bradford theses are licenced under a <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/">Creative Commons Licence</a>. University of Bradford School of Health Studies
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Peri-operative
Local anaesthesia
Regional anaesthesia
Intra-operative
Interventions
Anxiety
Randomised controlled trial
Survey
Surgery
spellingShingle Peri-operative
Local anaesthesia
Regional anaesthesia
Intra-operative
Interventions
Anxiety
Randomised controlled trial
Survey
Surgery
Marran, Jayne
Anxiety and it's management during awake procedures in operating theatres. A survey and randomised controlled trial.
description This study investigates the prevalence of peri-operative anxiety and the effective management of intra-operative anxiety during awake surgery. Plastic and vascular surgical patients were selected for the study as many procedures performed within these specialities are performed under local or regional anaesthesia. The study consists of two distinct stages. The first stage was a postal survey of patients (n=213) who had undergone awake plastic, renal access or carotid surgery up to two weeks previously, in order to determine retrospectively the prevalence of peri-operative anxiety. The second stage of the study was a randomised controlled trial of interventions for the effective management of intra-operative anxiety in patients (n=128) having undergone the same surgical procedures described in stage one. The interventions tested in stage two were handholding and an anxiety management package involving a relaxation technique and a procedural information leaflet, against a ¿usual care¿ control. The findings from stage one of the study suggest that peri-operative anxiety prevalence is low, although unacceptable levels of anxiety are seen to elevate during the intra-operative phase. The RCT in stage two demonstrated that intra-operative anxiety was no more effectively managed by the interventions tested than by usual care alone. The validity and reliability of retrospective anxiety measurement was investigated by comparing anxiety scores from stage one with contemporaneous and post-hoc anxiety scores from stage two and found to be an accurate measure of anxiety experienced at the time of the event.
author2 Newell, Robert J.
author_facet Newell, Robert J.
Marran, Jayne
author Marran, Jayne
author_sort Marran, Jayne
title Anxiety and it's management during awake procedures in operating theatres. A survey and randomised controlled trial.
title_short Anxiety and it's management during awake procedures in operating theatres. A survey and randomised controlled trial.
title_full Anxiety and it's management during awake procedures in operating theatres. A survey and randomised controlled trial.
title_fullStr Anxiety and it's management during awake procedures in operating theatres. A survey and randomised controlled trial.
title_full_unstemmed Anxiety and it's management during awake procedures in operating theatres. A survey and randomised controlled trial.
title_sort anxiety and it's management during awake procedures in operating theatres. a survey and randomised controlled trial.
publisher University of Bradford
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4875
work_keys_str_mv AT marranjayne anxietyanditsmanagementduringawakeproceduresinoperatingtheatresasurveyandrandomisedcontrolledtrial
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