Akira Gokoolparsadh, Meg Bourne, Alison McEwen, David J Amor, Erin Turbitt
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The strategy to classify the framing of prognostic information was defined iteratively, informed by the information found online.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>We interviewed 32 parents from across Australia. Parents had a child with a genetic neurodevelopmental condition, such as Fragile X syndrome (28 %), 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (16 %) or Angelman syndrome (16 %). Parents reported their preference to discuss their child's potential strengths as well as challenges regarding prognosis. They reported that conversations about prognosis often focused on the child's possible deficits and that online information they encountered was similarly framed negatively. Our analysis of online information confirmed parents accounts: 95.3 % was coded as negative, while only 4.7 % was positive/neutral.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>Our data provide evidence of an over-emphasis of deficit-framed prognostic information about genetic neurodevelopmental conditions. The initial exposure to negative information may adversely affect parents' psychological well-being and expectations, which future research could address. Health professionals could consider strengths-based framing of prognostic information gained from current and emerging technologies when returning results to families. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:目的:(1)了解家长如何看待与医疗保健专业人员进行的预后对话以及他们对这些对话的偏好;(2)调查网上预后信息的框架:这是一项混合方法研究,包括:(1) 对家长访谈进行主题分析;(2) 对互联网上描述负面信息的预后信息进行量化。对预后信息框架进行分类的策略是根据网上信息反复确定的:我们采访了来自澳大利亚各地的 32 位家长。家长的孩子患有遗传性神经发育疾病,如脆性 X 综合征(28%)、22q11.2 缺失综合征(16%)或安格曼综合征(16%)。家长们表示,他们更愿意讨论孩子的潜在优势以及预后方面的挑战。他们报告说,关于预后的谈话通常集中在孩子可能存在的缺陷上,而他们所遇到的在线信息也同样是负面的。我们对网上信息的分析证实了家长们的说法:95.3%的信息被编码为负面,只有4.7%的信息是正面/中性的:我们的数据证明,有关遗传性神经发育疾病的预后信息过于强调缺陷框架。最初接触到的负面信息可能会对父母的心理健康和期望产生不利影响,未来的研究可以解决这一问题。医疗专业人员在将结果反馈给家庭时,可以考虑以优势为基础,对从现有技术和新兴技术中获得的预后信息进行构架。本研究的结果有助于为健康传播实践和在线内容开发提供参考。
Parents' perspectives on conversations about prognosis and an assessment of prognostic information available online: A mixed-methods study.
Background: Conversations about prognosis for genetic neurodevelopmental conditions are becoming more frequent; however, there is a lack of evidence and guidance on how to approach these conversations and frame the information being provided.
Objective: (1) To understand how parents perceive prognostic conversations with healthcare professionals and their preferences for these conversations, (2) To investigate the framing of prognostic information found online.
Methods: This was a mixed-methods study, comprising of (1) a thematic analysis of interviews with parents and (2) a quantification of prognostic information available on the internet that portrayed a negative message. The strategy to classify the framing of prognostic information was defined iteratively, informed by the information found online.
Results: We interviewed 32 parents from across Australia. Parents had a child with a genetic neurodevelopmental condition, such as Fragile X syndrome (28 %), 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (16 %) or Angelman syndrome (16 %). Parents reported their preference to discuss their child's potential strengths as well as challenges regarding prognosis. They reported that conversations about prognosis often focused on the child's possible deficits and that online information they encountered was similarly framed negatively. Our analysis of online information confirmed parents accounts: 95.3 % was coded as negative, while only 4.7 % was positive/neutral.
Conclusions: Our data provide evidence of an over-emphasis of deficit-framed prognostic information about genetic neurodevelopmental conditions. The initial exposure to negative information may adversely affect parents' psychological well-being and expectations, which future research could address. Health professionals could consider strengths-based framing of prognostic information gained from current and emerging technologies when returning results to families. Findings from this study can help to inform health communication practices as well as online content development.
期刊介绍:
Disability and Health Journal is a scientific, scholarly, and multidisciplinary journal for reporting original contributions that advance knowledge in disability and health. Topics may be related to global health, quality of life, and specific health conditions as they relate to disability. Such contributions include:
• Reports of empirical research on the characteristics of persons with disabilities, environment, health outcomes, and determinants of health
• Reports of empirical research on the Systematic or other evidence-based reviews and tightly conceived theoretical interpretations of research literature
• Reports of empirical research on the Evaluative research on new interventions, technologies, and programs
• Reports of empirical research on the Reports on issues or policies affecting the health and/or quality of life for persons with disabilities, using a scientific base.