2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.pedhc.2008.08.002
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Association Between Parental Anxiety and Compliance With Preoperative Requirements for Pediatric Outpatient Surgery

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Cited by 38 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…One recent study has shown that the probability of parental noncompliance with four preoperative requirements (dietary restrictions, timely arrival at the hospital, arrival at the assigned room, and completion of required medical forms) was associated with the level of state anxiety [3]. However, this study has not suggested any mechanism that explains this association.…”
Section: Noncompliance and Anxietycontrasting
confidence: 68%
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“…One recent study has shown that the probability of parental noncompliance with four preoperative requirements (dietary restrictions, timely arrival at the hospital, arrival at the assigned room, and completion of required medical forms) was associated with the level of state anxiety [3]. However, this study has not suggested any mechanism that explains this association.…”
Section: Noncompliance and Anxietycontrasting
confidence: 68%
“…In addition, previous studies identified specific factors that were related for parental preoperative anxiety prior to outpatient surgery of their child, among other age of the child; previous surgery, if other children in the family had previous surgery; educational level of parents [3,21]. However, our study did not reveal any associations between these factors and anxiety level and therefore future studies are needed in order to clarify these possible associations.…”
Section: Tablecontrasting
confidence: 63%
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“…Anxiety about childhood disease is a normal feature in parents (Parkinson et al 1999), and the level of anxiety depends on factors such as personality, mothers being more anxious than fathers and number of children (Chahal et al 2009). Societal change in sociological factors such as increased mobility of the population has reduced the number of persons that young parents can consult when their child gets sick (Plantin and Daneback 2009).…”
Section: Health Information Searching On the Webmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the present study, parents were allowed to stay in the room during intravenous access or induction. High parental anxiety leads to increased anxiety in children, prolonged recovery process, higher pain scores, increased use of narcotic analgesics, and extended hospitalization periods (17,18). However, as the parents included in this study were observed and identified to have the ability to control their emotions, they were allowed to stay with their children, and this may have had a role in achieving a high satisfaction level.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%