Bates Carolyn R, Pallotto Isabella K, Moore Rachel M, Covitz Lynne M, Dreyer Gillette Meredith L
Department of Pediatrics, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, USA; Center for Children's Healthy Lifestyles and Nutrition, Kansas City, MO, USA; University of Kansas Cancer Center, Kansas City, KS, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
J Pediatr Nurs. 2023 Sep-Oct;72:e33-e39. doi: 10.1016/j.pedn.2023.06.002. Epub 2023 Jun 10.
Pediatric nurses work closely with families of children with new cancer diagnoses and can provide essential supports to promote coping and adjustment. This cross-sectional qualitative study aimed to gather caregiver perspectives on barriers and facilitators to adaptive family functioning during the early phases of cancer treatment, with a focus on family rules and routines.
Caregivers (N = 44) of a child diagnosed with cancer and receiving active treatment completed a semi-structured interview about their engagement in family rules and routines. Time since diagnosis was abstracted from the medical record. A multi-pass inductive coding strategy was utilized to extract themes identifying caregiver-reported facilitators and barriers to maintaining consistent family rules and routines during the first year of pediatric treatment.
Caregivers identified three primary contexts that presented barriers and facilitators to engagement in family rules and routines: the hospital setting (n = 40), the family system (n = 36), and the broader social and community setting (n = 26). Caregivers reported barriers primarily related to the demands of their child's treatment, additional caregiving needs, and needing to prioritize basic daily tasks (e.g., food, rest, household needs). Caregivers reported that different networks of support across contexts facilitated family rules and routines by expanding caregiver capacity in distinctive ways.
Findings provided insight into the importance of having multiple networks of support to extend caregiving capacity in the context of cancer treatment demands.
Providing nurses with training to facilitate problem-solving skills in the context of competing demands may provide a new avenue of clinical intervention at the bedside.
儿科护士与新确诊癌症儿童的家庭密切合作,能够提供重要支持以促进应对和适应。这项横断面定性研究旨在收集照顾者对于癌症治疗早期适应性家庭功能的障碍和促进因素的看法,重点关注家庭规则和日常惯例。
44名被诊断患有癌症并正在接受积极治疗的儿童的照顾者完成了一项关于他们参与家庭规则和日常惯例情况的半结构式访谈。从病历中提取确诊后的时间。采用多轮归纳编码策略来提取主题,以确定照顾者报告的在儿科治疗第一年维持一致家庭规则和日常惯例的促进因素和障碍。
照顾者确定了三个呈现参与家庭规则和日常惯例的障碍和促进因素的主要背景:医院环境(40人)、家庭系统(36人)以及更广泛的社会和社区环境(26人)。照顾者报告的障碍主要与孩子治疗的需求、额外的照顾需求以及需要优先处理基本日常任务(如食物、休息、家庭需求)有关。照顾者报告说,不同背景下的支持网络通过以独特方式扩大照顾者能力,促进了家庭规则和日常惯例。
研究结果揭示了在癌症治疗需求背景下拥有多个支持网络以扩展照顾能力的重要性。
为护士提供培训,以便在相互竞争的需求背景下促进解决问题的技能,可能为床边临床干预提供一条新途径。