Parents’ experiences with prognosis communication in advanced pediatric cancers

Article indépendant

GHOSHAL, A. | MUCKADEN, M. A. | GARG, C. | IYENGAR, J. | GANPATHY, K. V. | DAMANI, A. | DEODHAR, J. | VORA, T. | CHINNASWAMY, G.

Prognostic information in advanced cancers is distressing. We surveyed 30 parents of children with advanced cancer from a tertiary cancer center in India to understand parental preferences for prognostic information. We found that 17/20 (85%) parents desired as much information about prognosis as possible and wanted it expressed numerically. All parents found information about the prognosis to be upsetting but still wanted additional information about the prognosis, except, 2/20 (10%). Parents who found information ‘somewhat’ or ‘extremely’ upsetting 8/20 (40%) were no less likely to say that knowing prognosis was important, or that it helped in decision-making. Thus, although many parents find prognostic information about their children with cancer upsetting, parents who are upset by prognostic information are no less likely to want it. The upsetting nature of prognostic information does not diminish parents’ desire for such information or their sense of hope.

https://doi.org/10.1080/09699260.2022.2152169

Voir la revue «PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE, 31»

Autres numéros de la revue «PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Parents’ experiences with prognosis com...

Article | GHOSHAL, A. | PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE | n°3 | vol.31

Prognostic information in advanced cancers is distressing. We surveyed 30 parents of children with advanced cancer from a tertiary cancer center in India to understand parental preferences for prognostic information. We found that...

Parents’ experiences with prognosis com...

Article indépendant | GHOSHAL, A. | PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE | n°3 | vol.31

Prognostic information in advanced cancers is distressing. We surveyed 30 parents of children with advanced cancer from a tertiary cancer center in India to understand parental preferences for prognostic information. We found that...

A novel nurse-coordinated home care model for...

Article indépendant | GHOSHAL, A. | PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE | n°1 | vol.31

Background: Demand for home-based health care services has increased considerably in India. Traditionally, home-based care services are physician-led which puts pressure on the understaffed healthcare sector. This study aims to pi...

De la même série

Evaluating provision of psychological assessm...

Article indépendant | PALEY, Carole A. | PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE | n°1 | vol.32

Objective: Psychological distress is common in palliative care patients. The 2004 National Institute of Healthcare and Excellence (NICE) guidance for supportive and palliative care for adults with cancer, which remains contemporar...

Evidence-based physiotherapy interventions : ...

Article indépendant | PENNYCOOKE, Linda | PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE | n°4 | vol.32

Maintaining independence and quality of life are significant issues for patients with a life-limiting illness and physiotherapists play an essential role in the palliative care multidisciplinary team in maintaining, restoring, and...

Feasibility and economic benefits of communit...

Article indépendant | MEROLLINI, Katharina M. D. | PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE | n°4 | vol.32

There is an increasing demand for community-based palliative care services in regional Australia, but feasibility and economic benefits are unclear. This study describes the financial components of service delivery, economic viabi...

A cost-consequence analysis of the Queensland...

Article indépendant | SNOSWELL, Centaine L. | PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE | n°5 | vol.32

Telehealth can extend the reach of specialist palliative care providers to ensure that patients can access specialist services closer to home. To examine the cost and consequences of the Specialist Palliative Rural Telehealth (SPa...

Compassionate community connectors : a distin...

Article indépendant | NOONAN, Kerrie | PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE | n°1 | vol.31

Public health approaches to palliative care have long promoted the contribution of formal and informal volunteering to providing effective end-of-life care in neighbourhoods and communities. A central strategy for this is a ‘compa...

Chargement des enrichissements...