School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Children's Health Queensland Hospital and Health Service, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Pediatr Res. 2023 Jan;93(1):160-167. doi: 10.1038/s41390-022-02054-3. Epub 2022 Apr 11.
Our study aims to explore the experience of having a central venous access device (CVAD) from the perspective of the child and family and how movements within and outside of hospital environments influence this experience.
A mixed-methods study was conducted across Children's Health Queensland (Australia), including inpatient and home-care settings. Children less than 18 years with CVADs were eligible and followed for 3 months or CVAD removal. A subgroup of primary caregivers participated in semi-structured interviews. Quantitative and qualitative measures of child and family CVAD experiences were explored.
In total, 163 patients with 200 CVADs were recruited and followed for 6993 catheter days (3329 [48%] inpatients; 3147 [45%] outpatients; 517 [7%] home). Seventeen participants were interviewed. Experiences of having a CVAD were complex but predominantly positive primarily related to personalized CVAD care, healthcare quality, and general wellbeing. Their experience was shaped by their movements through hospital and home environments, including care variation and distress with procedures. Device selection and insertion location further influenced experience, including safety, impairments in activities of daily living, school, and recreation.
CVAD experiences were influenced by nonmodifiable (e.g., diagnosis) and modifiable factors (e.g., education; care variation). Clinical approaches and policies that account for family and child considerations should be explored.
Variation in decision making and management for pediatric CVADs is accepted by many clinicians, but the influence this variation has on the health experience of children and their families is less well explored. This is the first study to draw from a broad range of children requiring CVADs to determine their experience within and outside of healthcare facilities. Interdisciplinary clinicians and researchers need to work collaboratively with children and their families to provide resources and support services to ensure they have positive experiences with CVADs, no matter where they are managed, or who they are managed by.
本研究旨在从儿童和家庭的角度探讨中心静脉置管(CVAD)的体验,以及医院内外环境的变化如何影响这种体验。
本混合方法研究在澳大利亚昆士兰儿童健康中心(Children's Health Queensland)进行,包括住院和家庭护理环境。年龄小于 18 岁、有 CVAD 的患者符合入组条件,并随访 3 个月或 CVAD 移除。一小部分主要照顾者参与了半结构化访谈。探讨了儿童和家庭 CVAD 体验的定量和定性措施。
共招募了 163 名患者,200 个 CVAD 进行了 6993 个导管日的随访(3329 例[48%]住院患者;3147 例[45%]门诊患者;517 例[7%]家庭)。共对 17 名参与者进行了访谈。拥有 CVAD 的体验很复杂,但主要是积极的,主要与个性化的 CVAD 护理、医疗质量和整体健康状况有关。他们的体验受到他们在医院和家庭环境中的活动的影响,包括程序方面的护理差异和痛苦。设备选择和插入位置进一步影响了体验,包括安全性、日常生活活动、学校和娱乐活动的受损。
CVAD 体验受到不可改变的因素(如诊断)和可改变的因素(如教育;护理差异)的影响。应探索考虑到家庭和儿童的临床方法和政策。
许多临床医生接受了儿科 CVAD 决策和管理的差异,但这种差异对儿童及其家庭的健康体验的影响还没有得到很好的探索。这是第一项从广泛需要 CVAD 的儿童中得出结论,以确定他们在医疗保健设施内外的体验的研究。跨学科的临床医生和研究人员需要与儿童及其家庭合作,提供资源和支持服务,以确保他们无论在何处接受管理,无论由谁管理,都能拥有积极的 CVAD 体验。