Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, British Columbia, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2009 Dec 21;9:242. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-9-242.
Continuity of care has been explored largely from academic and service provider perspectives, and in relation to adult patient/client groups. We interviewed parents of children with complex chronic health conditions to examine how their experiences and perceptions of continuity of care fit with these perspectives; and to identify the salient factors in the experience of, and factors contributing to, continuity in this population.
Parents of 47 elementary school-aged children with spina bifida, Down syndrome, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, Duchenne muscular dystrophy or cystic fibrosis participated in semi-structured interviews. Parents described and mapped the pattern of their interactions with service providers over time in all domains relevant to their child's health, well-being, and development (medical, rehabilitational, educational, and social supportive services), with particular attention paid to their perceptions of connectedness or coherency in these interactions. Verbatim transcripts were analyzed thematically using a framework approach to impose structure regarding parents' perspectives on continuity of care.
Existing academic concepts of relational, informational and management continuity were all discernable in parents' narratives. A thorough knowledge of the child on the part of service providers emerged as extremely important to parents; such knowledge was underpinned by continuity of personal relationships, principally, and also by written information. For this population, notions of continuity extend to the full range of service providers these children and families need to achieve optimal health status, and are not limited to physicians and nurses. Communication among providers was seen as integral to perceived continuity. Compartmentalization of services and information led to parents assuming a necessary, though at times, uncomfortable, coordinating role. Geographic factors, institutional structures and practices, provider attitudes, and, on occasion, parent preferences and judgments, were all found to create barriers to "seamless" management and provision of care continuity across providers, settings, and sectors.
These findings add new perspectives to the understanding of continuity within chronically ill children's health care. They are relevant to contemporary initiatives to improve continuity of services to children with special health care needs, demonstrate the need for parental support of their important role in maintaining continuity, and suggest avenues for further research.
连续性护理主要从学术和服务提供者的角度进行了探讨,并与成年患者/客户群体有关。我们采访了患有复杂慢性健康状况的儿童的父母,以研究他们对连续性护理的经验和看法如何符合这些观点;并确定该人群在连续性体验中以及促成连续性的因素中突出的因素。
47 名小学生的父母参与了半结构化访谈,他们的孩子患有脊柱裂、唐氏综合征、注意力缺陷/多动障碍、杜氏肌营养不良症或囊性纤维化。父母描述并绘制了他们与服务提供者在与孩子健康、幸福和发展相关的所有领域(医疗、康复、教育和社会支持服务)的互动模式,特别注意他们对这些互动的连接性或连贯性的看法。逐字记录采用框架方法进行分析,以对父母对连续性护理的看法施加结构。
服务提供者的专业知识对于父母来说极其重要,这在父母的叙述中可以明显看出存在关系、信息和管理连续性等现有学术概念。这种知识的基础是个人关系的连续性,主要是书面信息。对于这一人群,连续性的概念延伸到了儿童和家庭需要获得最佳健康状态的所有服务提供者,而不仅限于医生和护士。提供者之间的沟通被视为连续性的一个组成部分。服务和信息的分割导致父母承担了必要的、有时是不舒服的协调角色。地理因素、机构结构和实践、提供者态度,以及有时父母的偏好和判断,都被发现是在提供者、设置和部门之间实现“无缝”管理和提供护理连续性的障碍。
这些发现为理解慢性病儿童医疗保健中的连续性提供了新的视角。它们与改善有特殊医疗需求的儿童服务连续性的当代举措有关,证明了父母支持他们在保持连续性方面的重要作用的必要性,并为进一步研究提供了途径。