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Parent perceptions of the impact of the Paediatric Intensive Care environment on delivery of family-centred care

To examine parent perception of how the physical and cultural environment of the paediatric intensive care unit impacted the implementation of family-centred care as outlined by the Institute for Patient and Family Centered Care. A qualitative descriptive design utilizing secondary analysis from a l...

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Published in:Intensive & critical care nursing 2019-02, Vol.50, p.88-94
Main Authors: Hill, Carrie, Knafl, Kathleen A., Docherty, Sharron, Santacroce, Sheila Judge
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Language:English
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container_title Intensive & critical care nursing
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creator Hill, Carrie
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description To examine parent perception of how the physical and cultural environment of the paediatric intensive care unit impacted the implementation of family-centred care as outlined by the Institute for Patient and Family Centered Care. A qualitative descriptive design utilizing secondary analysis from a longitudinal study. Sixty-one interviews with three mothers and three fathers (31 interviews with mothers, 30 interviews with fathers) of infants with complex congenital heart defects treated in a paediatric intensive care unit were subjected to secondary analysis via content analysis. The previously completed individual interviews with parents took place at least monthly ranging from soon after birth of their infant to one year of age or infant death, whichever occurred first. The family-centred care core concepts of information sharing, participation, respect and dignity were present in parent interviews. Parents indicated that the physical and cultural environment of the pediatric intensive care unit impacted their perceptions of how each of the core concepts was implemented by clinicians. The unit environment both positively and negatively impacted how parents experienced their infant’s hospitalisation. In the paediatric intensive care unit, family centred care operationalised as policy differed from actual parent experiences. The impact of the physical and cultural environment should be considered in the delivery of critical care, as the environment was shown to impact implementation of each of the core concepts.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.iccn.2018.07.007
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024; Social Science Premium Collection; Sociology Collection
subjects Adult
Babies
Built environment
Caregivers
Childbirth & labor
Clinical decision making
Communication
Congenital heart disease
Content analysis
Critical care
Decision making
Environment
Families & family life
Family centered care
Family-centred care
Female
Holistic nursing
Hospitalization
Humans
Infant mortality
Infants
Information sharing
Intensive care
Intensive Care Units, Pediatric - organization & administration
Intensive Care Units, Pediatric - standards
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Nursing care
Paediatric intensive care unit
Parents & parenting
Parents - psychology
Participation
Patient-Centered Care - methods
Patient-Centered Care - standards
Patients
Pediatrics
Perception
Perceptions
Qualitative
Qualitative Research
Southeastern United States
title Parent perceptions of the impact of the Paediatric Intensive Care environment on delivery of family-centred care
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