Decisional Support Needed when Facing Tough Decisions: Survey of Parents with Children having Differences of Sex Development.

Frontiers in urology Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-02-09 DOI:10.3389/fruro.2023.1089077
Melissa Gardner, William B Brinkman, Meg Carley, Noi Liang, Sophie Lightfoot, Kendra Pinkelman, Phyllis W Speiser, Tara Schafer-Kalkhoff, Kristina I Suorsa-Johnson, Brian VanderBrink, Erica M Weidler, Jessica Wisniewski, Dawn Stacey, David E Sandberg
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Abstract

Introduction: Parents of infants and young children newly diagnosed with differences of sex development (DSD) commonly face medical and psychosocial management decisions at a time when they are first learning about the condition and cannot consult their child for input. The aim of this study was to identify areas of greatest need for parental decisional support.

Methods: 34 parents of children receiving care for DSD at one of three US children's hospitals participated in a survey to learn what clinical and psychosocial decisions needed to be made on behalf of their child. Parents were then asked to identify and focus on a "tough" decision and respond to questions assessing factors affecting decision-making, decision-making preferences, decisional conflict, and decision regret. Descriptive analyses were conducted.

Results: Decisions about surgery and aspects of sharing information about their child's condition with others were the two most frequently reported decisions overall, experienced by 97% and 88% of parents, as well as most frequently nominated as tough decisions. Many parents reported mild to moderate levels of decisional conflict (59%) and decision regret (74%). Almost all parents (94%) reported experiencing at least one factor as interfering with decision-making (e.g., "worried too much about choosing the 'wrong' option"). Parents universally reported a desire to be involved in decision-making - preferably making the final decision primarily on their own (79%), or together with their child's healthcare providers (21%). The majority of parents judged healthcare providers (82%) and patient/family organizations (58%) as trustworthy sources of information.

Discussion: Parents of children with DSD encounter medical, surgical, and psychosocial management decisions. Despite difficulties including emotional distress and informational concerns (including gaps and overload), parents express strong desires to play key roles in decision-making on behalf of their children. Healthcare providers can help identify family-specific needs through observation and inquiry in the clinical context. Together with families, providers should focus on specific clinical management decisions and support parental involvement in making decisions on behalf of young children with DSD.

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面对艰难决定时需要的决策支持:对孩子性别发育差异的父母的调查
新诊断为性发育差异(DSD)的婴幼儿的父母通常在第一次了解这种情况时面临医疗和社会心理管理决定,无法咨询孩子的意见。本研究的目的是确定最需要父母决策支持的领域。方法在美国三家儿童医院之一接受DSD治疗的34名儿童家长参加了一项调查,以了解代表他们的孩子需要做出哪些临床和社会心理决定。然后,父母们被要求识别并关注一个“艰难”的决定,并回答影响决策的因素、决策偏好、决策冲突和决策后悔的问题。进行描述性分析。结果关于手术的决定和与他人分享孩子病情信息的决定是两个最常见的决定,分别有97%和88%的父母经历过,也是最常被认为是艰难的决定。许多父母报告有轻度到中度的决策冲突(59%)和决策后悔(74%)。几乎所有的父母(94%)都表示,至少有一种因素会影响决策(例如,“过于担心选择‘错误’的选项”)。家长普遍表示希望参与决策——最好是主要自己做出最终决定(79%),或与孩子的医疗保健提供者一起做出最终决定(21%)。大多数家长认为医疗保健提供者(82%)和患者/家庭组织(58%)是值得信赖的信息来源。DSD患儿的父母遇到医疗、手术和心理管理决策。尽管困难包括情绪困扰和信息担忧(包括差距和过载),父母还是表达了强烈的愿望,希望代表孩子在决策中发挥关键作用。医疗保健提供者可以通过在临床环境中观察和询问来帮助确定家庭特定需求。提供者应与家庭一起关注具体的临床管理决策,并支持家长代表患有DSD的幼儿参与决策。
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