Department of Pediatrics, Division of Hematology/Oncology, Washington University School of Medicine, 4523 Clayton Avenue, Campus Box 8005, St. Louis, MO, 63110, USA.
Department of Oncology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN, USA.
Support Care Cancer. 2021 Sep;29(9):4957-4968. doi: 10.1007/s00520-021-06047-6. Epub 2021 Feb 10.
Communication is essential to providing family-centered care in pediatric oncology. Previously, we developed a functional model of communication between parents and clinicians. Prior research has not examined the domains and purposes of communication between children and clinicians. We explored parental perspectives to begin understanding this communication.
Secondary analysis of semi-structured interviews with 80 parents of children with cancer across 3 academic medical centers during treatment, survivorship, or bereavement. We employed semantic content analysis, using the functional model of parental communication as an a priori framework.
We identified 6 distinct functions of communication in child-clinician interactions: building relationships, promoting patient engagement, addressing emotions, exchanging information, managing uncertainty, and fostering hope. These communication functions were identified by parents of older (> 13 years old) and younger (< 12 years old) children, although the specific manifestations sometimes differed by age. Notably, age was not always an indicator of the child's communication needs. For example, some parents noted older children who did not want to discuss difficult topics, whereas other parent described younger children who wanted to know every detail. Two functions from the previous parental model of communication were absent from this analysis: supporting family self-management and making decisions.
Interviews with 80 parents provided evidence for 6 distinct functions of communication between children and clinicians. These functions apply to older and younger children, although specific manifestations might vary by age. This functional model provides a framework to guide clinicians' communication efforts and future communication research.
在儿科肿瘤学中,沟通对于提供以家庭为中心的护理至关重要。此前,我们已经开发出一种父母与临床医生之间沟通的功能模型。先前的研究尚未探讨儿童与临床医生之间的沟通领域和目的。我们探讨了父母的观点,以开始理解这种沟通。
对 3 家学术医疗中心的 80 名癌症患儿的父母在治疗、生存或丧亲期间进行的半结构化访谈进行二次分析。我们采用语义内容分析,使用父母沟通的功能模型作为先验框架。
我们在儿童与临床医生的互动中确定了 6 种不同的沟通功能:建立关系、促进患者参与、处理情绪、交流信息、管理不确定性和培养希望。这些沟通功能是由年龄较大(> 13 岁)和较小(< 12 岁)的儿童的父母识别出来的,尽管具体表现有时因年龄而异。值得注意的是,年龄并不总是孩子沟通需求的指标。例如,一些父母表示年龄较大的孩子不想讨论困难的话题,而其他父母则描述了年龄较小的孩子想知道每一个细节。先前的父母沟通模式中的两个功能在本分析中缺失:支持家庭自我管理和做出决策。
对 80 名父母的访谈为儿童与临床医生之间的 6 种不同沟通功能提供了证据。这些功能适用于年龄较大和较小的儿童,尽管具体表现可能因年龄而异。该功能模型为指导临床医生的沟通努力和未来的沟通研究提供了框架。