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癌症患儿父母预后沟通的差异:种族和民族的影响。

Disparities in prognosis communication among parents of children with cancer: The impact of race and ethnicity.

机构信息

Department of Pediatric Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts.

Division of Population Sciences' Center for Outcomes and Policy Research, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts.

出版信息

Cancer. 2017 Oct 15;123(20):3995-4003. doi: 10.1002/cncr.30960. Epub 2017 Sep 5.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Most parents of children with cancer say they want detailed information about their child's prognosis. However, prior work has been conducted in populations of limited diversity. The authors sought to evaluate the impact of parental race/ethnicity on prognosis communication experiences among parents of children with cancer.

METHODS

In total, 357 parents of children with cancer and the children's physicians were surveyed at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children's Hospital and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Outcome measures were parental preferences for prognostic information, physician beliefs about parental preferences, prognosis communication processes, and communication outcomes. Associations were assessed by logistic regression with generalized estimating equations to correct for physician clustering.

RESULTS

Two hundred eighty-one parents (79%) were white, 23 (6%) were black, 29 (8%) were Hispanic, and 24 (7%) were Asian/other. Eighty-seven percent of parents wanted as much detail as possible about their child's prognosis, with no significant differences by race/ethnicity (P = .75). However, physician beliefs about parental preferences for prognosis communication varied based on parent race/ethnicity, with physicians considering black and Hispanic parents less interested in details about prognosis than whites (P = .003). Accurate understanding of a less favorable prognosis was greater among white (49%) versus nonwhite parents (range, 20%-29%), although this difference was not statistically significant (P = .14).

CONCLUSIONS

Most parents, regardless of racial and ethnic background, want detailed prognostic information about their child's cancer. However, physicians underestimate the information needs of black and Hispanic parents. To meet parents' information needs, physicians should ask about parents' information preferences before prognosis discussions. Cancer 2017;123:3995-4003. © 2017 American Cancer Society.

摘要

背景

大多数癌症患儿的父母表示,他们希望获得关于孩子预后的详细信息。然而,之前的研究仅在多样性有限的人群中开展。作者旨在评估父母种族/民族对癌症患儿父母预后沟通体验的影响。

方法

共有 357 名癌症患儿的父母和他们的医生在达纳-法伯癌症研究所/波士顿儿童医院和费城儿童医院接受了调查。研究的结局指标为父母对预后信息的偏好、医生对父母偏好的看法、预后沟通的过程和沟通结果。使用广义估计方程的逻辑回归来校正医生聚类,对关联进行评估。

结果

281 名父母(79%)为白人,23 名(6%)为黑人,29 名(8%)为西班牙裔,24 名(7%)为亚裔/其他。87%的父母希望尽可能详细地了解孩子的预后,其在种族/民族方面没有显著差异(P=.75)。然而,医生对父母对预后沟通偏好的看法因父母的种族/民族而异,医生认为黑人及西班牙裔父母对预后细节的兴趣不如白人(P=.003)。白人父母(49%)对预后的准确理解大于非白人父母(范围为 20%-29%),尽管这一差异没有统计学意义(P=.14)。

结论

大多数父母,无论其种族和民族背景如何,都希望获得关于孩子癌症的详细预后信息。然而,医生低估了黑人和西班牙裔父母的信息需求。为了满足父母的信息需求,医生应在预后讨论前询问父母的信息偏好。癌症 2017;123:3995-4003。©2017 美国癌症协会。

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