Division of General Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Departments of Pediatrics.
Pediatrics. 2022 Jun 1;149(6). doi: 10.1542/peds.2021-053913.
Despite compelling evidence that patients and families report valid and unique safety information, particularly for children with medical complexity (CMC), hospitals typically do not proactively solicit patient or family concerns about patient safety. We sought to understand parent, staff, and hospital leader perspectives about family safety reporting in CMC to inform future interventions.
This qualitative study was conducted at 2 tertiary care children's hospitals with dedicated inpatient complex care services. A research team conducted approximately 60-minute semistructured, individual interviews with English and Spanish-speaking parents of CMC, physicians, nurses, and hospital leaders. Audio-recorded interviews were translated, transcribed, and verified. Two researchers coded data inductively and deductively developed and iteratively refined the codebook with validation by a third researcher. Thematic analysis allowed for identification of emerging themes.
We interviewed 80 participants (34 parents, 19 nurses and allied health professionals, 11 physicians, and 16 hospital leaders). Four themes related to family safety reporting were identified: (1) unclear, nontransparent, and variable existing processes, (2) a continuum of staff and leadership buy-in, (3) a family decision-making calculus about whether to report, and (4) misaligned staff and parent priorities and expectations. We also identified potential strategies for engaging families and staff in family reporting.
Although parents were deemed experts about their children, buy-in about the value of family safety reporting among staff and leaders varied, staff and parent priorities and expectations were misaligned, and family decision-making around reporting was complex. Strategies to address these areas can inform design of family safety reporting interventions attuned to all stakeholder groups.
尽管有确凿的证据表明患者及其家属能够提供有效的、独特的安全信息,尤其是对于患有复杂疾病的儿童(CMC)而言,但医院通常不会主动征集患者或家属对患者安全的关注。我们试图了解家长、医护人员和医院领导对 CMC 中家庭安全报告的看法,以为未来的干预措施提供信息。
本定性研究在 2 家设有专门住院复杂护理服务的三级儿童保健医院进行。一个研究小组对 CMC 的英语和西班牙语家长、医生、护士和医院领导进行了大约 60 分钟的半结构化、个体访谈。采访的音频记录被翻译、转录并验证。两名研究人员对数据进行了归纳编码,并通过第三名研究人员的验证,对编码手册进行了发展和迭代式细化。主题分析使我们能够识别出新兴主题。
我们共采访了 80 名参与者(34 名家长、19 名护士和相关健康专业人员、11 名医生和 16 名医院领导)。确定了与家庭安全报告相关的 4 个主题:(1)现有流程不明确、不透明且多变,(2)员工和领导层的认同度存在连续性,(3)家庭关于是否报告的决策计算,以及(4)员工和家长的优先级和期望不一致。我们还确定了让家庭和员工参与家庭报告的潜在策略。
尽管家长被认为是其子女的专家,但员工和领导对家庭安全报告价值的认同程度存在差异,员工和家长的优先级和期望不一致,而且家庭在报告方面的决策很复杂。解决这些问题的策略可以为设计适合所有利益相关者群体的家庭安全报告干预措施提供信息。