医学
炎症性肠病
焦虑
优势比
疾病
心情
内科学
可能性
肠易激综合征
单变量分析
萧条(经济学)
检查表
克罗恩病
多元分析
逻辑回归
物理疗法
精神科
经济
宏观经济学
心理学
认知心理学
作者
Tiffany Taft,Josie McGarva,Tina A Omprakash,Kathryn Noth,Anjali U. Pandit,Ece Mutlu,Stephen B. Hanauer
出处
期刊:Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2022-07-27
卷期号:29 (5): 675-683
被引量:8
摘要
Abstract Introduction Medical trauma related to IBD (IBD-PTS) affects approximately 25% of patients and is associated with poor outcomes. Prior studies identify common hospitalization experiences as potentially traumatic but have not measured risk relationships for the development of IBD-PTS. We aim to investigate what aspects of hospitalizations may increase the chance of medical trauma and IBD-PTS development. Methods Adult patients with IBD enrolled in the IBD Partners database were recruited. Study specific questionnaires included PTSD checklist, 5th edition (PCL-5), patient experience questionnaire, and items about the patient’s most stressful hospitalization and nonhospital sources of medical trauma. Established criteria for the PCL-5 identified significant IBD-PTS symptoms (re-experiencing, avoidance, mood change, hyperarousal, global diagnosis). Select disease and treatment information was obtained from the main IBD Partners dataset. Univariate and multivariate statistics evaluated the relationships between hospitalization data and IBD-PTS. Results There were 639 participants with at least 1 hospitalization for IBD included. Approximately two-thirds had Crohn’s disease; most were White, non-Hispanic, female, middle-aged, and reported their IBD as being in remission. Forty percent of patients stated a hospitalization was a source of IBD-PTS. Frequent anxiety while hospitalized increased the odds of IBD-PTS 2 to 4 times; similar relationships existed for pain/pain control. Higher quality communication, information, and listening skills reduced the odds of IBD-PTS, albeit marginally. Conclusions Patients with IBD consistently cite hospitalizations as potential sources of medical trauma. Poorly managed anxiety and pain demonstrate the greatest chance for IBD-PTS development. Gender and racial/ethnic differences emerged for these risks. Positive interactions with the medical team may help mitigate in-hospital IBD-PTS development.
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