Title

What do parents value regarding pediatric palliative and hospice care in the home setting?

Year of Publication

2020

Date Published

2020 Jul 31

ISSN Number

1873-6513

Abstract

<p><strong>CONTEXT: </strong>Children with life-shortening serious illnesses and medically complex care needs are often cared for by their families at home. Little, however, is known about what aspects of pediatric palliative and hospice care in the home setting (PPHC@Home) families value the most.</p>

<p><strong>OBJECTIVE: </strong>To explore how parents rate and prioritize domains of PPHC@Home as the first phase of a larger study that developed a parent-reported measure of experiences with PPHC@Home.</p>

<p><strong>METHODS: </strong>Twenty domains of high-value PPHC@Home, derived from the National Consensus Project's Guidelines for Quality Palliative Care, the literature, and a stakeholder panel, were evaluated. Using a discrete choice experiment, parents provided their ratings of the most and least valued PPHC@Home domains. We also explored potential differences in how subgroups of parents rated the domains.</p>

<p><strong>RESULTS: </strong>Forty-seven parents participated. Overall, highest-rated domains included Physical Aspects of Care: Symptom Management, Psychological/Emotional Support for the Child, and Care Coordination. Lowest-rated domains included Spiritual and Religious Aspects of Care and Cultural Aspects of Care. In exploratory analyses, parents who had other children rated the Psychological/Emotional Aspects of Care for the Sibling(s) domain significantly higher than parents who did not have other children (P=0.02). Furthermore, bereaved parents rated the Caregiver Supportat the End of Life domain significantly higher than parents who were currently caring for their child (P=0.04). No other significant differences in domain ratings were observed.</p>

<p><strong>CONCLUSIONS: </strong>Knowing what parents value most about PPHC@Home provides the foundation for further exploration and conversation about priority areas for resource allocation and care improvement efforts.</p>

DOI

10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2020.07.024

Alternate Title

J Pain Symptom Manage

PMID

32745574

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