| Literature DB >> 23997951 |
Karen Cook1, Harold Siden, Susan Jack, Lehana Thabane, Gina Browne.
Abstract
Advances in pediatric care have not provided the interdisciplinary support services required by those young adults with pediatric life-threatening conditions (pedLTCs) who live beyond childhood but have limited expectations to live past early adulthood. These young adults, the first generation to live into adulthood, face multiple challenges transitioning from a plethora of pediatric palliative services to scant adult health services. In a case study, using an innovative bulletin board focus group, we describe the complex interplay of the health, education, and social service sectors in this transition. Our descriptions include system deficits and strengths and the young adults' resilience and coping strategies to overcome those deficits and move forward with their lives. Young adults with pedLTC need knowledgeable providers, coordinated and accessible services, being respected and valued, and services and supports that promote independence. We recommend implementation of multidisciplinary solutions that are focused on young adult priorities to ensure seamless access to resources to support these young adults' health, educational, vocational, and social goals. The input and voice of young adults in the development of these services are imperative to ensure that multisystem services support their needs and life goals.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23997951 PMCID: PMC3753759 DOI: 10.1155/2013/286751
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Res Pract ISSN: 2090-1429
Propositions: up against the system.
| (1) Youth with pedLTC are potentially juxtaposed between the hope of achieving new young adult milestones and their own end of life trajectory. | |
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| (2) Health care transitions are embedded with the broader systems and are connected to family, social, educational, cultural, and religious factors [ | |
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| (3) Development of comparable medical and support services did not follow interventions to increase life expectancy [ | |
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| (4) Current transitional services from integrated pediatric services to the adult health and social service sectors are limited in their breadth, scope, and effectiveness to meet the needs of young adults with pedLTC [ | |
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| (5) Resiliency, vulnerability, personal factors (cognitive capacity, temperament, self-direction, imagination, values, meaning of transitional phase, and motives), parental influences (availability, history of acceptance to youth decision making, attitudes or preoccupation with youth's strengths or limits, and view of impact of youth's pedLTC on siblings and family), and external supports (parents, siblings, extended family, teachers, and community/religious/cultural mentors and volunteers) can influence the youth's experience of the transition process [ | |
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| (6) Health and other service providers in the adult care sector could have limited awareness of the complexity of the issues for youth with pedLTC and/or do not have a mandate and/or the resources to provide integrated services to young adults with pedLTC [ | |
Participant characteristics for face-to-face interviews and bulletin board discussion groups n = 10.
| Conditions | Number of participants | Age range and mean | Gender |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duchennes muscular dystrophy | 4 | 20–28 | Males = 4 |
| Spinal muscular atrophy | 3 | 21–26 | Females = 3 |
| Other: undiagnosed, brain tumor, Friedrichs Ataxia | 3 | 20–22 | Males = 2 |