Broden Elizabeth G, Mazzola Emanuele, DeCourcey Danielle D, Blume Elizabeth D, Wolfe Joanne, Snaman Jennifer M
Department of Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Data Science, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, USA.
J Pediatr Nurs. 2023 Sep-Oct;72:e166-e173. doi: 10.1016/j.pedn.2023.06.024. Epub 2023 Jun 22.
Parents' perceptions of their child's suffering affect their bereavement experience. Identifying factors that shape parental perceptions of suffering could help build effective supportive interventions for children and parents navigating EOL and grief. We aimed to compare parent-perceived child suffering between diagnostic groups and identify related factors.
We combined databases from 3 surveys of parents whose children who died following cancer, a complex chronic condition (CCC), or advanced heart disease. We built multivariable logistic regression models to identify relationships between parent-perceived child suffering and parent/child, illness experience, and care-related factors.
Among 277 parents, 41% rated their child's suffering as moderate or high. Fifty-seven percent of parents whose child died from cancer reported that their child suffered "a lot" or "a great deal" at EOL, compared to 33% whose child died from a CCC, and 17% whose child died from heart disease (P < 0.001). Preparation for EOL symptoms was associated with decreased parent-perceived child suffering in multivariable modeling, with parents who were prepared for EOL 68% less likely to rate their child's suffering as high compared to those who felt unprepared (AOR: 0.32, CI [0.13-0.77], P = 0.013).
Preparing families for their child's EOL may help mitigate lingering perceptions of suffering. Operationalizing preparation is crucial to optimizing family support during EOL care.
Preparation for symptoms, and access to resources, including medical/psychosocial interventions and staff, may help ease parental perception of EOL suffering. Clinicians should prioritize preparing families for what to expect during a child's dying process.
父母对孩子痛苦的认知会影响他们的丧亲经历。识别影响父母对痛苦认知的因素有助于为面临临终和悲伤的儿童及父母建立有效的支持性干预措施。我们旨在比较不同诊断组中父母感知到的孩子的痛苦,并确定相关因素。
我们合并了来自3项针对孩子死于癌症、复杂慢性病(CCC)或晚期心脏病的父母的调查数据库。我们建立了多变量逻辑回归模型,以确定父母感知到的孩子的痛苦与父母/孩子、疾病经历及护理相关因素之间的关系。
在277名父母中,41%将孩子的痛苦评为中度或高度。孩子死于癌症的父母中,57%报告称他们的孩子在临终时遭受了“很多”或“非常多”的痛苦,而孩子死于复杂慢性病的父母中这一比例为33%,孩子死于心脏病的父母中这一比例为17%(P<0.001)。在多变量模型中,对临终症状的准备与父母感知到的孩子痛苦的减轻相关,与那些感到未做好准备的父母相比,为临终做好准备的父母将孩子的痛苦评为高度的可能性降低了68%(调整后比值比:0.32,可信区间[0.13 - 0.77],P = 0.013)。
让家庭为孩子的临终做好准备可能有助于减轻持续存在的痛苦认知。将准备工作落实到位对于在临终护理期间优化家庭支持至关重要。
对症状的准备以及获得包括医疗/心理社会干预和工作人员在内的资源,可能有助于减轻父母对临终痛苦的认知。临床医生应优先让家庭为孩子临终过程中可能出现的情况做好准备。