Personalized and yet standardized : an informed approach to the integration of bereavement care in pediatric oncology settings

Article indépendant

WIENER, Lori | ROSENBERG, Abby R. | LICHTENTHAL, Wendy G. | TAGER, Julia | WEAVER, Meaghann S.

OBJECTIVE: The death of a child has been associated with adverse parental outcomes, including a heightened risk for psychological distress, poor physical health, loss of employment income, and diminished psychosocial well-being. Psychosocial standards of care for centers serving pediatric cancer patients recommend maintaining at least one meaningful contact between the healthcare team and bereaved parents to identify families at risk for negative psychosocial sequelae and to provide resources for bereavement support. This study assessed how this standard is being implemented in current healthcare and palliative care practices, as well as barriers to its implementation. METHOD: Experts in the field of pediatric palliative care and oncology created a survey that was posted with review and permission on four listservs. The survey inquired about pediatric palliative and bereavement program characteristics, as well as challenges and barriers to implementation of the published standards of care. RESULT: The majority of participants (N = 100) self-reported as palliative care physicians (51%), followed by oncologists (19%). Although 59% of staff reported that their center often or always deliver bereavement care after a child's death, approximately two-thirds reported having no policy for the oncology team to routinely assess bereavement needs. Inconsistent types of bereavement services and varying duration of care was common. Twenty-eight percent of participants indicated that their center has no systematic contact with bereaved families after the child's death. Among centers where contacts are made, the person who calls the bereaved parent is unknown to the family in 30% of cases. Few centers (5%) use a bereavement screening or assessment tool. Significance of results: Lack of routine assessment of bereavement needs, inconsistent duration of bereavement care, and tremendous variability in bereavement services suggest more work is needed to promote standardized, policy-driven bereavement care. The data shed light on multiple areas and opportunities for improvement.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1478951517001249

Voir la revue «Palliative & Supportive Care»

Autres numéros de la revue «Palliative & Supportive Care»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Personalized and yet standardized : an inform...

Article | WIENER, Lori | Palliative & Supportive Care

OBJECTIVE: The death of a child has been associated with adverse parental outcomes, including a heightened risk for psychological distress, poor physical health, loss of employment income, and diminished psychosocial well-being. P...

Personalized and yet standardized : an inform...

Article indépendant | WIENER, Lori | Palliative & Supportive Care

OBJECTIVE: The death of a child has been associated with adverse parental outcomes, including a heightened risk for psychological distress, poor physical health, loss of employment income, and diminished psychosocial well-being. P...

A summary of pediatric palliative care team s...

Article | WEAVER, Meaghann S. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°4 | vol.21

BACKGROUND: Little is known about the composition, availability, integration, communication, perceived barriers, and work load of pediatric palliative care (PPC) providers serving children and adolescents with cancer. OBJECTIVE: T...

De la même série

SAHD-10 : development and initial validation ...

Article indépendant | KREMEIKE, Kerstin | Palliative & Supportive Care | vol.23

OBJECTIVES: Wishes to hasten death (WTHDs) are common in patients with serious illness. The Schedule of Attitudes Toward Hastened Death (SAHD) is a validated 20-item instrument for measuring WTHD. Two short versions have also been...

Communicating about the end of life : the pat...

Article indépendant | D'ANDRIA URSOLEO, Jacopo | Palliative & Supportive Care | vol.23

Patients with cancer are surviving longer, and therefore have more time both living as well as for end-of-life (EOL) planning (Bergenholtz et al. Reference Bergenholtz, Missel and Timm2020). Major concerns for dying patients relat...

Upper arm movements in the last days of life ...

Article indépendant | JULIAO, Miguel | Palliative & Supportive Care | vol.23

One of the most crucial stages of palliative care is the last days and hours of life, which require special attention and knowledgeable identification of clinical signs described as signs of impending death (SID). Our case series ...

Patients with advanced cancer in Uganda : gen...

Article indépendant | KULIKOWSKI, Julia D. | Palliative & Supportive Care | vol.23

OBJECTIVES: Cancer is associated with physical, social, spiritual, and psychological changes in patients and their caregivers. However, in sub-Saharan Africa, there is lack of evidence on the impact of gender, social norms, and re...

Family and carer experiences of advanced care...

Article indépendant | WHITEFORD, Gail | Palliative & Supportive Care | vol.23

OBJECTIVES: Despite practice development in the area of advanced care planning (ACP) and systems wide changes implemented to support ACP processes, there has been a paucity of research which has addressed the experiences of a key ...

Chargement des enrichissements...