Health professionals' experiences of grief associated with the death of pediatric patients : a systematic review

Article indépendant

BARNES, Shannon | JORDAN, Zoe | BROOM, Margaret

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this review was to synthesize the experiences of health professionals who have experienced grief as a result of a pediatric patient dying. INTRODUCTION: There has been some research into health professionals' grief experiences, but there has not been a review that synthesizes the findings of these experiences. Other related reviews have focused on prenatal, perinatal or adult deaths or the coping strategies employed by health professionals. This review highlights the complexities of experiences faced by pediatric health professionals. INCLUSION CRITERIA: Qualitative studies involving pediatric health professionals working in any healthcare setting who had experienced grief from the death of a patient were considered for inclusion. Studies were conducted in any country, at any time and published in English. METHODS: The search was conducted in PubMed, CINAHL, Embase, PsycINFO, Scopus and ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. The search was completed in January 2019. The review followed principles of meta-aggregation in line with the JBI approach. Methodological quality assessment was based on representation of participants' voices and congruence between research methodology and both research question and analysis of data. RESULTS: Meta-aggregation led to three synthesized findings from 12 qualitative studies that met the inclusion and methodological quality criteria. Studies predominantly included nurses working in a hospital, with sample sizes ranging from six to 25 participants. The synthesized findings were physical, behavioral, psychological or spiritual symptoms; compounding grief; and alleviating grief. Physical, behavioral, psychological, or spiritual symptoms highlighted the various characteristics of grief experiences by health professionals. Compounding grief was the largest synthesized finding and incorporated the various factors that contributed to a poorer experience of grief. Alleviating grief showed the limited identified factors that improved the experience of grief. Methodological quality led to synthesized findings receiving a ConQual rating of low or moderate. CONCLUSIONS: The synthesized findings from this review highlight the varied reported experience of grief in health professionals. The methodological quality and reporting of studies, however, led to decreased confidence in the synthesized findings and recommendations arising from this review. Healthcare professionals should be aware of the potential for experiencing grief when a patient dies and the compounding and alleviating factors associated with this. Further research could expand participant and language limitations, and improve methodological quality and reporting.

http://dx.doi.org/10.11124/JBISRIR-D-19-00156

Voir la revue «JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports»

Autres numéros de la revue «JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Health professionals' experiences of grief as...

Article | BARNES, Shannon | JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this review was to synthesize the experiences of health professionals who have experienced grief as a result of a pediatric patient dying. INTRODUCTION: There has been some research into health professi...

Health professionals' experiences of grief as...

Article indépendant | BARNES, Shannon | JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this review was to synthesize the experiences of health professionals who have experienced grief as a result of a pediatric patient dying. INTRODUCTION: There has been some research into health professi...

De la même série

Prevalence of burnout in health professionals...

Article indépendant | PAROLA, Vitor | JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports | n°7 | vol.15

BACKGROUND: More than ever, the current increasing need for palliative care leads to health professionals providing this type of care which further leads to multiple challenges, and stressful and demanding situations. The multiple...

Use of non-pharmacological interventions for ...

Article indépendant | COELHO, Adriana | JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports | n°7 | vol.15

BACKGROUND: Palliative care aims to provide the maximum possible comfort to people with advanced and incurable diseases. The use of non-pharmacological interventions to promote comfort in palliative care settings has been increasi...

Experiences of substitute decision makers in ...

Article indépendant | CRESP, Sarah J. | JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports | n°7 | vol.15

REVIEW QUESTION/OBJECTIVE: The objective of this systematic review is to identify and synthesize the best available qualitative evidence on how substitute decision makers (SDMs) are affected by and experience making decisions at e...

Best evidence for advance care planning in ol...

Article indépendant | KONNO, Rie | JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this review is to summarize current best evidence for advance care planning in older adults with dementia and their families. INTRODUCTION: Contemporary end of life care cannot be fully achieved without...

Health professionals' experiences of grief as...

Article indépendant | BARNES, Shannon | JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this review was to synthesize the experiences of health professionals who have experienced grief as a result of a pediatric patient dying. INTRODUCTION: There has been some research into health professi...

Chargement des enrichissements...