Literature DB >> 21143267

Levers and barriers to patient-centred care with children: findings from a synthesis of studies of the experiences of children living with type 1 diabetes or asthma.

K Curtis-Tyler1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The last 50 years have seen a sea change in approaches to health care with children, from a time when children were routinely separated from parents while in hospital, to current recognition of the importance of placing the experiences of children and their families at the heart of care. Yet, there is a gap in the evidence about how children's involvement might be best achieved.This study aimed to synthesize findings of children's experiences of long-term illness and, from this, to identify levers and barriers to patient-centred care with children.
METHODS: A synthesis of studies of the experiences of children living with type 1 diabetes or asthma. DATA SOURCES: Eight health and social care databases, bibliography searches and consultation with field experts and first authors of included studies. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: Qualitative studies with children 10 years (mean) and younger on their experiences of living with type 1 diabetes or asthma. MAIN
RESULTS: Findings suggest key 'levers' to patient-centred care with children include: (1) engagement with children's expertise about their own lives: their personal and social experiences of their care, including how these are affected by their relative lack of power in some settings; (2) exploring children's understandings and preferences in terms of their physical sensations and day-to-day experiences; (3) willingness to find resources to engage with even the youngest children; (4) avoiding age-based assumptions about children's contributions to their care. DISCUSSION AND
CONCLUSIONS: Action on the above 'levers' may present a range of challenges in healthcare settings not least because it represents a move away from medicine's historical focus on children's developing competencies to engage rather with children's social realities from the earliest ages.
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21143267     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2214.2010.01180.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Care Health Dev        ISSN: 0305-1862            Impact factor:   2.508


  7 in total

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2.  An evaluation of physicians' engagement of children with asthma in treatment-related discussions.

Authors:  Delesha M Carpenter; Angela Stover; Catherine Slota; Guadalupe X Ayala; Karen Yeatts; Gail Tudor; Stephanie Davis; Dennis Williams; Betsy Sleath
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Authors:  Pooria Sarrami-Foroushani; Joanne Travaglia; Deborah Debono; Jeffrey Braithwaite
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6.  Barriers and facilitators to taking on diabetes self-management tasks in pre-adolescent children with type 1 diabetes: a qualitative study.

Authors:  David Rankin; Jeni Harden; Katharine Barnard; Louise Bath; Kathryn Noyes; John Stephen; Julia Lawton
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  7 in total

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