1 Department of Medical Humanities, Julius Center for Health Sciences and Primary Care, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
2 Department of Pediatric Oncology, Emma Children's Hospital, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Palliat Med. 2017 Dec;31(10):956-963. doi: 10.1177/0269216317692682. Epub 2017 Feb 1.
Parents of children with a life-limiting disease have to rely on themselves at home while adequate paediatric palliative care is lacking. In several countries, paediatric palliative care teams are introduced to ensure continuity and quality of care and to support the child and the family. Yet, little is known about how parents experience such multidisciplinary teams.
To obtain insight into the support provided by a new paediatric palliative care team from the parents' perspective.
An interpretative qualitative interview study using thematic analysis was performed.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: A total of 47 single or repeated interviews were undertaken with 42 parents of 24 children supported by a multidisciplinary paediatric palliative care team located at a university children's hospital. The children suffered from malignant or non-malignant diseases.
In advance, parents had limited expectations of the paediatric palliative care team. Some had difficulty accepting the need for palliative care for their child. Once parents experienced what the team achieved for their child and family, they valued the team's involvement. Valuable elements were as follows: (1) process-related aspects such as continuity, coordination of care, and providing one reliable point of contact; (2) practical support; and (3) the team members' sensitive and reliable attitude. As a point of improvement, parents suggested more concrete clarification upfront of the content of the team's support.
Parents feel supported by the paediatric palliative care team. The three elements valued by parents probably form the structure that underlies quality of paediatric palliative care. New teams should cover these three valuable elements.
患有危及生命疾病的儿童的父母在家中不得不依靠自己,而此时适当的儿科姑息治疗却缺乏。在一些国家,引入了儿科姑息治疗团队,以确保治疗的连续性和质量,并为儿童和家庭提供支持。然而,人们对父母如何体验这种多学科团队知之甚少。
从父母的角度了解新的儿科姑息治疗团队提供的支持。
采用主题分析的解释性定性访谈研究。
地点/参与者:对位于一所大学儿童医院的多学科儿科姑息治疗团队所支持的 24 名儿童的 42 名父母进行了总计 47 次单次或重复访谈。这些孩子患有恶性或非恶性疾病。
父母事先对儿科姑息治疗团队的期望有限。有些父母难以接受为孩子提供姑息治疗的需要。一旦父母体验到团队为孩子和家庭所取得的成就,他们就会重视团队的参与。有价值的元素包括:(1)与过程相关的方面,如连续性、护理协调和提供一个可靠的联系点;(2)实际支持;(3)团队成员敏感可靠的态度。作为改进的一点,父母建议在团队支持的内容方面更具体地提前澄清。
父母感到受到儿科姑息治疗团队的支持。父母看重的这三个要素可能构成了儿科姑息治疗质量的基础结构。新的团队应该涵盖这三个有价值的要素。