Wright Julia, Curran Janet, Rose-Davis Benjamin, Cellucci Tania, Duffy Ciarån M, Tucker Lori B, Batthish Michelle, Huber Adam M, Lang Bianca, Levy Deborah M, Rumsey Dax G, Watanabe Duffy Karen N, Stringer Elizabeth
IWK Health Care Centre and Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
McMaster Children's Hospital and McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
ACR Open Rheumatol. 2020 Mar;2(3):138-146. doi: 10.1002/acr2.11111. Epub 2020 Jan 29.
To identify barriers and facilitators to the uptake of information from research by parents of children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA).
Parents of children with JIA participated in focus group and telephone interviews at four Canadian pediatric rheumatology centers. The semistructured interviews focused on perceptions about JIA research, how new information about JIA was obtained and used, and what information was of most interest. Transcripts were analyzed using a general inductive approach.
Twenty-eight parents participated in the study. Parents were very interested in research that addresses the outcomes of JIA and side effects of medications. Parents communicated an expectation that information from research be communicated to them by their child's pediatric rheumatologist as part of clinical care. Parents felt that it would be helpful to have information available to them in a variety of formats including written, video, and online. The timing of information delivery is an important factor, with parents being most interested and engaged in learning about new information about JIA at diagnosis and disease flares. We found that parents were overall unaware of new findings from JIA research and therefore may not be optimally utilizing this potentially helpful information in the care of their children.
This study has led to an understanding of Canadian parents' perceptions about research and existing gaps in the translation of research knowledge. This information will facilitate the development, implementation, and evaluation of future knowledge translation interventions aimed at improving the uptake of research information in the care of children with JIA.
确定幼年特发性关节炎(JIA)患儿家长获取研究信息的障碍和促进因素。
JIA患儿的家长参与了加拿大四个儿科风湿病中心的焦点小组和电话访谈。半结构化访谈聚焦于对JIA研究的看法、如何获取和使用有关JIA的新信息,以及最感兴趣的信息。采用一般归纳法对访谈记录进行分析。
28位家长参与了该研究。家长们对涉及JIA治疗结果和药物副作用的研究非常感兴趣。家长们期望作为临床护理的一部分,孩子的儿科风湿病医生能将研究信息传达给他们。家长们认为以书面、视频和在线等多种形式提供信息会有所帮助。信息传递的时机是一个重要因素,家长们在诊断和疾病发作时对了解有关JIA的新信息最感兴趣且参与度最高。我们发现家长总体上不了解JIA研究的新发现,因此在照顾孩子时可能没有最佳地利用这些潜在有用的信息。
本研究增进了对加拿大父母对研究的看法以及研究知识转化方面现有差距的理解。这些信息将有助于未来知识转化干预措施的开发、实施和评估,旨在提高JIA患儿护理中研究信息的获取。