Division of Pediatric Bioethics and Palliative Care, Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Children's Research Institute, Center for Clinical and Translational Research, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Qualitative Research Scientist, Survey and Data Management Core, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2020 Dec;60(6):1154-1162.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2020.06.035. Epub 2020 Jul 3.
Children with complex chronic conditions (CCCs) have high morbidity and mortality. While these children often receive palliative care services, little is known about parental preparedness for their child's end of life (EOL).
This study aimed to elucidate aspects important to preparedness at EOL among bereaved parents of children with CCCs.
In this cross-sectional study, parents of children who received care at Boston Children's Hospital and died between 2006 and 2015 completed 21 open-response items querying communication, decision-making, and EOL experiences as part of the Survey of Caring for Children with CCCs. Additional demographic data were extracted from the child's medical record. An iterative multistage thematic analysis of responses was utilized to identify key contexts, conditions, and themes pertaining to preparedness.
One hundred ten of 114 parents responded to open-ended items; 63% (n = 69) had children with congenital or central nervous system progressive primary conditions for a median of 7.5 years (IQR 0.8-18.1) before death. Seventy-one percent (n = 78/110) had palliative care involvement and 65% (n = 69/106) completed advance care planning. Parents described preparedness as a complex concept that extended beyond "readiness" for their child's death. Three domains emerged that contributed to parents' lack of preparedness: 1) chronic illness experiences; 2) pretense of preparedness; and 3) circumstances and emotions surrounding their child's death.
Most bereaved parents of children with CCCs described feeling unprepared for their child's EOL, despite palliative care and advance care planning, suggesting preparedness is a nuanced concept beyond "readiness." More research is needed to identify supportive elements among parents facing their child's EOL.
患有复杂慢性病(CCC)的儿童发病率和死亡率较高。尽管这些儿童经常接受姑息治疗服务,但对于其父母对孩子临终(EOL)的准备情况却知之甚少。
本研究旨在阐明患有 CCC 的丧亲父母在 EOL 时准备的重要方面。
在这项横断面研究中,2006 年至 2015 年间在波士顿儿童医院接受治疗并死亡的儿童的父母完成了 21 个开放性回复项目,询问了沟通、决策和 EOL 经历,作为《照顾患有复杂慢性病儿童的调查》的一部分。还从孩子的病历中提取了其他人口统计学数据。利用迭代多阶段主题分析方法对答复进行分析,以确定与准备情况有关的关键背景、条件和主题。
114 位父母中有 110 位对开放性问题做出了回应;63%(n=69)的儿童患有先天性或中枢神经系统进行性原发性疾病,在死亡前中位数为 7.5 年(IQR 0.8-18.1)。71%(n=78/110)有姑息治疗的参与,65%(n=69/106)完成了预先护理计划。父母将准备情况描述为一个复杂的概念,不仅包括对孩子死亡的“准备”。有三个领域促成了父母的准备不足:1)慢性病的经历;2)假装准备好;3)他们孩子死亡时的情况和情绪。
尽管有姑息治疗和预先护理计划,但大多数患有 CCC 的丧亲父母都表示对孩子的 EOL 感到毫无准备,这表明准备是一个比“准备好”更细致的概念。需要进一步研究,以确定面临孩子 EOL 的父母的支持因素。