Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA.
Pediatrics. 2012 May;129(5):903-9. doi: 10.1542/peds.2011-3056. Epub 2012 Apr 16.
The aim of the current study was to examine demographic and contextual correlates of voluntariness in parents making research or treatment decisions for their children with cancer.
Participants included 184 parents of children with cancer who made a decision about enrolling the child in a research or treatment protocol within the previous 10 days. Parents completed questionnaires that assessed voluntariness, external influence by others, concern that the child's care would be negatively affected if the parent did not agree, time pressure, information adequacy, and demographics.
Lower perceived voluntariness was associated with lower education, male gender, minority status, and not having previous experience with a similar decision. Parents who reported lower voluntariness also perceived more external influence and time pressure, had more concern about the child's care being negatively affected if they declined, and perceived that they had either too much or not enough information about the decision. In a multivariate regression, education, minority status, gender, external influence, and too little information remained significantly associated with voluntariness.
Several groups of parents appear to be at risk for decreased voluntariness when making research or treatment decisions for their seriously ill children, including fathers, nonwhite parents, and those with less education. Parental voluntariness may be enhanced by helping parents to mitigate the effects of unhelpful or unwanted influences by others and ensuring that their information needs are met.
本研究旨在探讨父母在为癌症患儿做出研究或治疗决策时的自愿性的人口统计学和背景相关性。
参与者包括 184 名在过去 10 天内为孩子决定参加研究或治疗方案的癌症患儿的父母。父母完成了评估自愿性、他人外部影响、担心如果父母不同意会对孩子的治疗产生负面影响、时间压力、信息充足性和人口统计学的问卷。
较低的感知自愿性与较低的教育程度、男性性别、少数族裔身份和没有类似决策的先前经验相关。报告较低自愿性的父母也认为他们受到更多的外部影响和时间压力,如果他们拒绝,对孩子的治疗会受到负面影响的担忧更大,并且认为他们对决策的信息要么太多,要么太少。在多元回归中,教育程度、少数族裔身份、性别、外部影响和信息量不足仍然与自愿性显著相关。
在为重病儿童做出研究或治疗决策时,包括父亲、非白人父母和受教育程度较低的父母在内的几个群体的父母似乎自愿性较低。通过帮助父母减轻他人无益或不受欢迎的影响,并确保满足他们的信息需求,可以提高父母的自愿性。