School of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Health, University of Plymouth, Devon, UK.
Faculty of Science, Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Aug 30;22(1):1103. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-08420-5.
Infectious illness is the biggest cause of death in children due to a physical illness, particularly in children under five years. If mortality is to be reduced for this group of children, it is important to understand factors affecting their pathways to hospital. The aim of this study was to retrospectively identify organisational and environmental factors, and individual child, family, and professional factors affecting timing of admission to hospital for children under five years of age with a serious infectious illness (SII).
An explanatory modified grounded theory design was used in collaboration with parents. Two stages of data collection were conducted: Stage 1, interviews with 22 parents whose child had recently been hospitalised with a SII and 14 health professionals (HPs) involved in their pre-admission trajectories; Stage 2, focus groups with 18 parents and 16 HPs with past experience of SII in young children. Constant comparative analysis generated the explanatory theory.
The core category was 'navigating uncertain illness trajectories for young children with serious infectious illness'. Uncertainty was prevalent throughout the parents' and HPs' stories about their experiences of navigating social rules and overburdened health services for these children. The complexity of and lack of continuity within services, family lives, social expectations and hierarchies provided the context and conditions for children's, often complex, illness trajectories. Parents reported powerlessness and perceived criticism leading to delayed help-seeking. Importantly, parents and professionals missed symptoms of serious illness. Risk averse services were found to refer more children to emergency departments.
Parents and professionals have difficulties recognising signs of SII in young children and can feel socially constrained from seeking help. The increased burden on services has made it more difficult for professionals to spot the seriously ill child.
传染病是导致 5 岁以下儿童因病死亡的最大原因。如果要降低该年龄段儿童的死亡率,了解影响其住院途径的因素至关重要。本研究旨在回顾性确定影响 5 岁以下患有严重传染性疾病(SII)儿童入院时间的组织和环境因素,以及儿童、家庭和专业人员个体因素。
采用与家长合作的解释性修正扎根理论设计。分两个阶段进行数据收集:第 1 阶段,对 22 名最近因 SII 住院的儿童的家长和 14 名参与其入院前轨迹的卫生专业人员(HPs)进行访谈;第 2 阶段,对 18 名有过儿童 SII 经历的家长和 16 名 HPs 进行焦点小组讨论。通过不断比较分析生成解释性理论。
核心类别是“为患有严重传染性疾病的幼儿导航不确定的疾病轨迹”。在家长和 HPs 讲述为这些儿童导航社会规则和不堪重负的卫生服务的经历中,普遍存在不确定性。服务、家庭生活、社会期望和等级制度的复杂性和缺乏连续性为儿童复杂的疾病轨迹提供了背景和条件。家长报告说感到无能为力,并认为受到批评,导致寻求帮助的时间延迟。重要的是,家长和专业人员错过了严重疾病的症状。规避风险的服务发现更多的儿童被转诊到急诊室。
家长和专业人员难以识别幼儿 SII 的迹象,并且可能感到在寻求帮助时受到社会限制。服务压力的增加使专业人员更难发现重病儿童。