Pedraza Eddy Carolina, Vokinger Anna Katharina, Cleves Daniela, Michel Gisela, Wrigley Jordan, Baker Justin N, Garcia-Quintero Ximena, McNeil Michael J
Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine (P.E.C., V.A.K., M.G.), University of Lucerne, Lucerne, Switzerland.
Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine (P.E.C., V.A.K., M.G.), University of Lucerne, Lucerne, Switzerland.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2024 May;67(5):e453-e471. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2024.01.023. Epub 2024 Jan 18.
The death of a child may be the most traumatic event a family can experience. Bereavement care for parents is essential for their physical and mental well-being and is a psychosocial standard of care. Childhood mortality is higher in low- or middle-income countries (LMICs); however, little is known regarding bereavement support or interventions for parents in LMICs.
To identify programs, services, initiatives, or interventions offered to bereaved parents in LMICs in hospital settings.
A systematic search was executed following the Preferred Reported Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Articles from LMICs describing interventions, programs, or resources provided to parents after the death of a child (0-18 years old) from any cause were included. Extracted data was categorized by demographics, study design, outcomes, and quality assessment using the McGill Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (MMAT).
We retrieved 4428 papers and screened their titles and abstracts, 36 articles were selected for full-text assessment, resulting in nine articles included in the final analysis. Most interventions described support for parents whose child died during the prenatal or neonatal period. The primary interventions included psychological counseling, creating mementos (such as photographs or footprints), and bereavement workshops. Only one paper described a fully established bereavement program for parents. Eight of the papers met high-quality criteria.
Although bereavement care is crucial for parents whose child has died, only a few studies have documented bereavement interventions in LMICs. More research may help with bereavement program implementation and improved care for bereaved parents in LMICs.
孩子的死亡可能是一个家庭所能经历的最具创伤性的事件。为父母提供哀伤护理对他们的身心健康至关重要,是一种社会心理护理标准。低收入或中等收入国家(LMICs)的儿童死亡率较高;然而,对于LMICs中父母的哀伤支持或干预措施知之甚少。
确定在LMICs的医院环境中为失去孩子的父母提供的项目、服务、举措或干预措施。
按照系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)指南进行系统检索。纳入来自LMICs的文章,这些文章描述了因任何原因导致儿童(0至18岁)死亡后向父母提供的干预措施、项目或资源。使用麦吉尔混合方法评估工具(MMAT),将提取的数据按人口统计学、研究设计、结果和质量评估进行分类。
我们检索到4428篇论文,并筛选了它们的标题和摘要,选择了36篇文章进行全文评估,最终分析纳入了9篇文章。大多数干预措施描述了对孩子在产前或新生儿期死亡的父母的支持。主要干预措施包括心理咨询、制作纪念品(如照片或脚印)以及哀伤工作坊。只有一篇论文描述了一个为父母完全建立的哀伤项目。其中八篇论文符合高质量标准。
尽管哀伤护理对孩子死亡的父母至关重要,但只有少数研究记录了LMICs中的哀伤干预措施。更多的研究可能有助于在LMICs实施哀伤项目并改善对失去孩子父母的护理。