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Problems and hopes perceived by mothers,fathers and physicians of children receiving palliative care
Authors:Douglas L. Hill PhD  Victoria A. Miller PhD  Kari R. Hexem MPH  Karen W. Carroll BS  Jennifer A. Faerber PhD  Tammy Kang MD  Chris Feudtner MD  PhD   MPH
Affiliation:1. Pediatric Advanced Care Team, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA;2. Department of Anesthesiology and Critical CareMedicine, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA;3. Pediatric Advanced Care Team, The University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Abstract:

Background

The quality of shared decision making for children with serious illness may depend on whether parents and physicians share similar perceptions of problems and hopes for the child.

Objective

(i) Describe the problems and hopes reported by mothers, fathers and physicians of children receiving palliative care; (ii) examine the observed concordance between participants; (iii) examine parental perceived agreement; and (iv) examine whether parents who identified specific problems also specified corresponding hopes, or whether the problems were left ‘hopeless’.

Method

Seventy‐one parents and 43 physicians were asked to report problems and hopes and perceived agreement for 50 children receiving palliative care. Problems and hopes were classified into eight domains. Observed concordance was calculated between parents and between each parent and the physicians.

Results

The most common problem domains were physical body (88%), quality of life (74%) and medical knowledge (48%). The most common hope domains were quality of life (88%), suffering (76%) and physical body (39%). Overall parental dyads demonstrated a high percentage of concordance (82%) regarding reported problem domains and a lower percentage of concordance on hopes (65%). Concordance between parents and physicians regarding specific children was lower on problem (65–66%) and hope domains (59–63%). Respondents who identified problems regarding a child's quality of life or suffering were likely to also report corresponding hopes in these domains (93 and 82%, respectively).

Conclusion

Asking parents and physicians to talk about problems and hopes may provide a straightforward means to improve the quality of shared decision making for critically ill children.
Keywords:agreement  concordance  paediatric palliative care  parental decision making
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