Division of Critical Care Medicine, Children's Memorial Hospital, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2013 Jan;14(1):e34-44. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0b013e31826e7408.
Describe the roles and respective responsibilities of PICU healthcare professionals in end-of-life care decisions faced by PICU parents.
Retrospective qualitative study.
University-based tertiary care children's hospital.
Eighteen parents of children who died in the pediatric ICU and 48 PICU healthcare professionals (physicians, nurses, social workers, child-life specialists, chaplains, and case managers).
In depth, semi-structured focus groups and one-on-one interviews designed to explore experiences in end-of-life care decision making.
We identified end-of-life care decisions that parents face based on descriptions by parents and healthcare professionals. Participants described medical and nonmedical decisions addressed toward the end of a child's life. From the descriptions, we identified seven roles healthcare professionals play in end-of-life care decisions. The family supporter addresses emotional, spiritual, environmental, relational, and informational family needs in a nondirective way. The family advocate helps families articulate their views and needs to healthcare professionals. The information giver provides parents with medical information, identifies decisions or describes available options, and clarifies parents' understanding. The general care coordinator helps facilitate interactions among healthcare professionals in the PICU, among healthcare professionals from different subspecialty teams, and between healthcare professionals and parents. The decision maker makes or directly influences the defined plan of action. The end-of-life care coordinator organizes and executes functions occurring directly before, during, and after dying/death. The point person develops a unique trusting relationship with parents.
Our results describe a framework for healthcare professionals' roles in parental end-of-life care decision making in the pediatric ICU that includes directive, value-neutral, and organizational roles. More research is needed to validate these roles. Actively ensuring attention to these roles during the decision-making process could improve parents' experiences at the end of a child's life.
描述儿科重症监护病房(PICU)医护人员在 PICU 父母面临的临终关怀决策中的角色和各自的责任。
回顾性定性研究。
大学附属三级儿童保健医院。
18 名儿童在儿科重症监护病房死亡的父母和 48 名儿科重症监护病房医护人员(医生、护士、社会工作者、儿童生活专家、牧师和个案经理)。
深入的半结构化焦点小组和一对一访谈,旨在探讨临终关怀决策中的经验。
我们根据父母和医护人员的描述,确定了父母在临终关怀决策中面临的问题。参与者描述了在孩子生命末期需要解决的医疗和非医疗决策。从描述中,我们确定了医护人员在临终关怀决策中扮演的七个角色。家庭支持者以非指导性的方式满足家庭的情感、精神、环境、关系和信息需求。家庭倡导者帮助家庭向医护人员表达自己的观点和需求。信息提供者向父母提供医疗信息,确定决策或描述可用选项,并澄清父母的理解。一般护理协调员帮助促进儿科重症监护病房内医护人员之间、不同专科团队之间以及医护人员与父母之间的互动。决策者制定或直接影响既定行动计划。临终关怀协调员组织和执行直接发生在死亡/死亡之前、期间和之后的职能。负责人与父母建立独特的信任关系。
我们的研究结果描述了儿科重症监护病房中父母临终关怀决策中医疗保健专业人员角色的框架,包括指令性、价值中立性和组织性角色。需要进一步的研究来验证这些角色。在决策过程中积极关注这些角色可以改善父母在孩子生命结束时的体验。