| Literature DB >> 27417597 |
Gemma Heath1, Hermione Montgomery2, Caron Eyre3, Carole Cummins4, Helen Pattison5, Rachel Shaw6.
Abstract
The involvement of parents in their child's hospital care has been strongly advocated in paediatric healthcare policy and practice. However, incorporating parental worries about their child's condition into clinical care can be difficult for both parents and healthcare professionals. Through our "Listening To You" quality improvement project we developed and piloted an innovative approach to listening, incorporating and responding to parental concerns regarding their child's condition when in hospital. Here we describe the phases of work undertaken to develop our "Listening To You" communications bundle, including a survey, literature review and consultation with parents and staff, before findings from the project evaluation are presented and discussed.Entities:
Keywords: communication; paediatrics; parents; patient safety; quality improvement
Year: 2016 PMID: 27417597 PMCID: PMC4934543 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare4010009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Semi-structured interview guide.
During the time your child was in hospital, were you ever concerned about her/his condition getting worse? What sort of information, if any, have you had about how to read the signs that something might be wrong with your child? What is/was your experience of raising concerns with a member of hospital staff? How did you talk to staff about your concerns while your child was in hospital? What advice would you to give to other parents in a similar situation? What would you change to enable parents to talk to staff more effectively about their concerns? |
What is your experience of parents expressing concern about their child’s condition? What sort of language do parents use to express their concern? How do you manage parents’ concern when you think there is no clinical evidence to cause concern? Is there a formal pathway for parents to raise their concerns on your ward/speciality? How do you feel about escalating concerns on behalf of parents? Do you record parental concerns? If so where/how? What do you think are the biggest challenges in listening to parents’ concerns? |
Figure 1Intervention development and pilot testing.
Evaluation results.
| Poster | 24 | 27 | |
| Booklet | 20 | 31 | |
| Resources | 3 | 48 | |
| Not seen | 30 | ||
| Not needed | 11 | ||
| Concern resolved verbally | 6 | ||
| Other | 1 | ||
| Were they easy to use? | 1 | ||
| Did they help communication with staff? | 0 | ||
| Did they give you more confidence to raise your concern with staff? | 2 | ||
| No feedback from doctors | |||
| Would be good if they had concerns | |||
| If younger parent or first timer it would be more useful | |||
| Good idea, especially to write down and then have to hand when the right person comes around | |||
| 38 | 11 | ||
| 4 | 37 | ||
| Were they easy to use? | 23 | 0 | |
| Did they help communication with parents? | 17 | 0 | |
| Did they give you more confidence to discuss parent’s concerns with them? | 22 | 1 | |
| 20 | 0 | ||
| 3 | 27 | ||
| Feeding reassurance | |||
| Feeding | |||
| Non-medical | |||
| Need to work with info for a couple of weeks before can make suggestions | |||
| Parents will feel empowered because they can write it down | |||
| Doctors need to talk to parents more | |||
| Ward plan to add resources to admissions documentation | |||
| Increased confidence especially for new and newly qualified staff | |||
| May increase workload as parents may raise more concerns in the short term | |||
| Parents have suggested to staff they would find form useful to document any questions she may have | |||
| Will increase confidence with medical staff | |||
| Find it undermining and offensive | |||
| Should be doing it anyway | |||
| Doesn’t like idea of parents being able to go straight to PACE | |||
| Whether it increases safety will depend on the parents | |||
| Too early to establish whether it will help with communication | |||