South Australian Brain Injury Rehabilitation Service, SA Health, Adelaide, Australia.
College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Flinders University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia.
Disabil Rehabil. 2022 Jan;44(2):282-290. doi: 10.1080/09638288.2020.1766582. Epub 2020 May 19.
To investigate the impact of familial acquired brain injury on children and adult family members, including their views of the support provided, gaps and recommendations for future interventions.
Qualitative exploratory study using a phenomenological approach.
Twenty-six participants were recruited from 12 families across the South Australian Brain Injury Rehabilitation Service (SABIRS) and external community brain injury agencies in Adelaide, South Australia. Sixteen children aged 5-18 participated through ten semi-structured interviews. Ten adults attended six interviews. Following transcription and member checking, thematic analyses occurred with pooled data from all interviews undergoing open, axial and selective coding.
Analyses revealed four main themes: (1) help parents help their children, (2) improve family functioning by giving children meaningful roles, (3) staff: don't leave children "in the dark," and (4) support for children is not one size fits all.
Children and adults reported significant gaps in support offered by acute and brain injury services after familial acquired brain injury. Children and adults need to receive intervention in addition to the patient. To fill identified gaps, participants recommended more input by clinical staff including the use of technology; specifically, the development of age-appropriate applications, educational videos and interactive games.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATIONProviding intervention directly to children and non-injured adults by clinical staff as early as the Intensive Care Unit and sub-acute rehabilitation after parental acquired brain injury is recommended to support their adjustment and improve family functioning.The development of age-appropriate and engaging tools via the use of technology is proposed to fill consumers identified gaps in brain injury support and education which could widen access and provide a flexible approach for support to be available anywhere, any time.
探讨家庭获得性脑损伤对儿童和成年家庭成员的影响,包括他们对所提供支持的看法、未来干预措施的差距和建议。
采用现象学方法的定性探索性研究。
从南澳大利亚脑损伤康复服务(SABIRS)和阿德莱德外部社区脑损伤机构的 12 个家庭中招募了 26 名参与者。16 名 5-18 岁的儿童通过 10 次半结构化访谈参与其中。10 名成年人参加了 6 次访谈。转录和成员检查后,对所有访谈的 pooled 数据进行了主题分析,采用开放式、轴向和选择性编码。
分析显示出四个主要主题:(1)帮助父母帮助他们的孩子,(2)通过赋予孩子有意义的角色来改善家庭功能,(3)工作人员:不要让孩子“蒙在鼓里”,(4)对孩子的支持不是一刀切的。
儿童和成年人报告说,在家庭获得性脑损伤后,急性和脑损伤服务提供的支持存在显著差距。儿童和成年人除了患者之外还需要接受干预。为了填补已确定的差距,参与者建议临床工作人员提供更多的投入,包括使用技术;具体来说,开发适合年龄的应用程序、教育视频和互动游戏。
建议临床工作人员在父母获得性脑损伤后的重症监护病房和亚急性康复阶段尽早直接向儿童和未受伤的成年人提供干预措施,以支持他们的适应和改善家庭功能。通过使用技术开发适合年龄的和引人入胜的工具,建议填补消费者在脑损伤支持和教育方面确定的差距,这可以扩大获得途径,并为随时随地提供支持提供灵活的方法。