"We Feel Alone and Not Listened To": Parents' Perspectives on Pediatric Serious Illness Care in Somali, Hmong, and Latin American Communities.

IF 4.4 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Annals of Family Medicine Pub Date : 2024-05-01 DOI:10.1370/afm.3106
Jennifer Needle, Sey Lee, Amran Ahmed, Rodolfo Batres, Jinhee Cha, Pilar de la Parra, Shannon Pergament, Kathleen A Culhane-Pera
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Abstract

Purpose: The experience of ethnically diverse parents of children with serious illness in the US health care system has not been well studied. Listening to families from these communities about their experiences could identify modifiable barriers to quality pediatric serious illness care and facilitate the development of potential improvements. Our aim was to explore parents' perspectives of their children's health care for serious illness from Somali, Hmong, and Latin-American communities in Minnesota.

Methods: We conducted a qualitative study with focus groups and individual interviews using immersion-crystallization data analysis with a community-based participatory research approach.

Results: Twenty-six parents of children with serious illness participated (8 Somali, 10 Hmong, and 8 Latin-American). Parents desired 2-way trusting and respectful relationships with medical staff. Three themes supported this trust, based on parents' experiences with challenging and supportive health care: (1) Informed understanding allows parents to understand and be prepared for their child's medical care; (2) Compassionate interactions with staff allow parents to feel their children are cared for; (3) Respected parental advocacy allows parents to feel their wisdom is heard. Effective communication is 1 key to improving understanding, expressing compassion, and partnering with parents, including quality medical interpretation for low-English proficient parents.

Conclusions: Parents of children with serious illness from Somali, Hmong, and Latin-American communities shared a desire for improved relationships with staff and improved health care processes. Processes that enhance communication, support, and connection, including individual and system-level interventions driven by community voices, hold the potential for reducing health disparities in pediatric serious illness.

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"我们感到孤独,没有人倾听我们的声音":索马里、苗族和拉美社区家长对儿科重症护理的看法。
目的:美国医疗保健系统中不同种族重症患儿家长的经历尚未得到很好的研究。倾听来自这些社区的家庭讲述他们的经历,可以发现优质儿科重症医疗服务中可改变的障碍,并促进潜在改进措施的发展。我们的目的是探讨明尼苏达州索马里人、苗族人和拉美人社区的家长对其子女重症医疗保健的看法:我们采用浸入式结晶数据分析和基于社区的参与式研究方法,通过焦点小组和个人访谈开展了一项定性研究:26 名重病儿童的家长(8 名索马里人、10 名苗族人和 8 名拉美人)参加了研究。家长们希望与医务人员建立双向信任和相互尊重的关系。根据家长在具有挑战性和支持性的医疗保健方面的经验,有三个主题支持这种信任:(1)知情的理解使家长能够理解他们孩子的医疗保健并做好准备;(2)与医务人员富有同情心的互动使家长能够感受到他们的孩子得到了关怀;(3)受尊重的家长主张使家长能够感受到他们的智慧得到了倾听。有效的沟通是增进理解、表达同情和与家长合作的关键,包括为英语水平较低的家长提供高质量的医疗翻译:来自索马里、苗族和拉美社区的重症患儿家长都希望改善与医护人员的关系,改进医疗服务流程。加强沟通、支持和联系的流程,包括由社区声音推动的个人和系统层面的干预措施,有可能减少儿科重症疾病的健康差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Annals of Family Medicine
Annals of Family Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
4.50%
发文量
142
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Annals of Family Medicine is a peer-reviewed research journal to meet the needs of scientists, practitioners, policymakers, and the patients and communities they serve.
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