| Literature DB >> 24625345 |
Douglas L Hill, Victoria Miller, Jennifer K Walter, Karen W Carroll, Wynne E Morrison, David A Munson, Tammy I Kang, Pamela S Hinds, Chris Feudtner1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Parents of seriously ill children participate in making difficult medical decisions for their child. In some cases, parents face situations where their initial goals, such as curing the condition, may have become exceedingly unlikely. While some parents continue to pursue these goals, others relinquish their initial goals and generate new goals such as maintaining the child's quality of life. We call this process of transitioning from one set of goals to another regoaling. DISCUSSION: Regoaling involves factors that either promote or inhibit the regoaling process, including disengagement from goals, reengagement in new goals, positive and negative affect, and hopeful thinking. We examine these factors in the context of parental decision making for a seriously ill child, presenting a dynamic conceptual model of regoaling. This model highlights four research questions that will be empirically tested in an ongoing longitudinal study of medical decision making among parents of children with serious illness. Additionally, we consider potential clinical implications of regoaling for the practice of pediatric palliative care.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24625345 PMCID: PMC3975157 DOI: 10.1186/1472-684X-13-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Brief definitions of key concepts
| Life threatening medical conditions that are highly likely to cause death in the near future, or medical conditions likely to result in severe disability, medical fragility, or dependency upon medical treatments and technology for survival. | |
| Persons less than 18 years of age, and for the purposes of this paper, also cognitively impaired patients older than 18 years who are seriously ill and unable to make medical decisions for themselves. | |
| Adults who are the primary medical decision makers for the child, including step-parents, foster parents, grandparents, and other family members. | |
| Aspirational expectations or hopes for the child’s care or future. | |
| Accepting that a goal (or set of goals) is no longer desirable, appropriate, or achievable, and discontinuing efforts to achieve the goal (or set of goals). | |
| Adopting a new goal (or set of goals) and initiating efforts to achieve the new goal (or set of goals). | |
| The process over time of disengaging from one set of goals and reengaging or adopting a new goal (or set of goals). | |
| The experience of a general positive mood or specific positive emotions. | |
| The experience of a general negative mood or specific negative emotions. | |
| A sense of being generally successful in achieving personal goals (personal agency) and being able to generate strategies to achieve these goals (pathways). |
Figure 1Regoaling process and underlying influential factors.