“I like it when you feel you can discuss things”: A qualitative study on sharing medical care for children with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities

Liesbeth Geuze , Samuel Schrevel , Indigo van Houte , Anne Goossensen
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Abstract

In the Netherlands, many parents of children with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities care for their children at home. Little is known about how parents and involved healthcare professionals share and align medical care for these children. This study aims to contribute to a better understanding of the dimensions that affect how medical care is shared and how healthcare professionals can align care with family needs. The study design was inspired by grounded theory. We analyzed in-depth interviews with 25 Dutch parents. The analysis identified five dimensions affecting how parents and professionals shared and aligned medical care: fragility, planned care, irregularities, interactions with providers, and parents’ choices. We recognized three distinctive ways these dimensions interplayed, characterizing scenarios of sharing care: dependent care, dialogical care, and autonomous care. The findings illuminated that parental distress decreased when parents could communicate about what they considered important for their child and family and its implications for sharing care. Parents developed their capacity to manage medical care and often evolved in their thinking about the quality of care and life. Sometimes this evolution was due to struggles with the care provided by professionals. Therefore, healthcare professionals may need to broaden the relational work of shared decision-making to include the sharing of medical care. Arrangements need to be continually reassessed as changes in the child’s and family’s situation trigger changes in preferred patterns of sharing care. Commitment to parents’ autonomy implies that healthcare professionals should be attentive to the parents’ emotional and relational needs.

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"我喜欢可以讨论事情的感觉":关于为深度智力残疾和多重残疾儿童分担医疗护理的定性研究
在荷兰,许多严重智力障碍和多重残疾儿童的父母都在家照顾孩子。对于家长和相关医疗保健专业人员如何分享和协调这些儿童的医疗保健服务,人们知之甚少。本研究旨在帮助人们更好地了解影响医疗护理共享的因素,以及医疗保健专业人员如何根据家庭需求调整医疗护理。研究设计受到基础理论的启发。我们对 25 位荷兰父母的深度访谈进行了分析。分析确定了影响家长和专业人员如何共享和协调医疗护理的五个方面:脆弱性、有计划的护理、不规则性、与医疗服务提供者的互动以及家长的选择。我们认识到这些维度相互作用的三种独特方式,从而确定了分享护理的情景:依赖性护理、对话性护理和自主性护理。研究结果表明,当父母能够就他们认为对孩子和家庭重要的事情及其对分担护理的影响进行沟通时,父母的痛苦就会减少。家长们发展了自己管理医疗护理的能力,他们对护理和生活质量的思考也在不断发展。有时,这种演变是由于与专业人员所提供的护理之间的斗争。因此,医疗保健专业人员可能需要扩大共同决策的关系工作,以包括医疗护理的共享。随着儿童和家庭情况的变化,需要不断重新评估分担护理的首选模式。对父母自主权的承诺意味着医护人员应关注父母的情感和关系需求。
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