| Literature DB >> 28687856 |
Rosa Geurtzen1, Arno van Heijst2, Jos Draaisma2, Laura Ouwerkerk2, Hubertina Scheepers3, Mallory Woiski4, Rosella Hermens5, Marije Hogeveen2.
Abstract
Prenatal counseling practices at the limits of viability do vary, and constructing a counseling framework based on guidelines, professional and parental preferences, might achieve more homogeneity. We aimed to gain insight into professionals' preferences on three domains of counseling, particularly content, organization, and decision making and their influencing factors. A qualitative, nationwide in-depth exploration among Dutch perinatal professionals by semi-structured interviews in focus groups was performed. Regarding content of prenatal counseling, preparing parents on the short-term situation (delivery room care) and revealing their perspectives on "quality of life" were considered important. Parents should be informed on the kind of decision, on the difficulty of individual outcome predictions, on survival and mortality figures, short- and long-term morbidity, and the burden of hospitalization. For organization, the making of and compliance with agreements between professionals may promote joint counseling by neonatologists and obstetricians. Supportive materials were considered useful but only when up-to-date, in addition to the discussion and with opportunity for personalization. Regarding decision making, it is not always clear to parents that a prenatal decision needs to be made and they can participate, influencing factors could be, e.g., unclear language, directive counseling, overload of information, and an immediate delivery. There is limited familiarity with shared decision making although it is the preferred model.Entities:
Keywords: Decision making; Extreme prematurity; Limits of viability; Prenatal counseling
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28687856 PMCID: PMC5511326 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-017-2952-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Domain: content of prenatal counseling—terms associated with preferred content of counseling
| Theme | Terms |
|---|---|
| Statistics/outcome data | Use general outcome or ranges, without excessive detail |
| Necessary information for parents to engage in decision making | No right or wrong choice |
| Necessary information for parents to be prepared for the near future | Practical information on direct delivery room care |
| Prioritization of topics in counseling | Key topics based on goal of parental engagement in decision making |
Fig. 1Domain: content of prenatal counseling—quotes on several themes associated with preferred content
Domain: organization of prenatal counseling—terms associated with preferred organization of counseling
| Theme | Terms |
|---|---|
| Preference in the prenatal counseling at the limits of viability | Influencing factors |
| Joint prenatal counseling by both obstetrician and neonatologist | Patient related |
| The use of guidelines/frameworks/protocols | Personalization based on |
| The use of supportive material in general | Availability material |
| The use of supportive material: decision aid | Visualization of complex information |
Fig. 2Domain: organization of prenatal counseling—quotes on several themes associated with preferred organization of counseling
Domain: decision making in prenatal counseling—themes associated with preferred decision making
| Theme | Terms |
|---|---|
| Preference in the prenatal counseling at the limits of viability | Influencing factors |
| It must be clear to parents that there is a decision moment | Doctor-related |
| Shared decision making as preferred decision model | - several assumptions and definitions about SDM |
Fig. 3Domain: decision making of prenatal counseling—quotes on several themes associated with preferred decision making
Different definitions of professionals on SDM
| “well-informed parents saying what they want for their child, a decision which you can support as a professional. That both support the decision” |
Preferred roles of parents and doctors in decision making, according to perinatal professionals
| Preferred role of parents and doctor in decision making, according to perinatal professionals | |
|---|---|
| Preferred role parent in decision making | To make clear whether they want to be involved in decision making |
| To make clear how disabilities are valued | |
| Preferred role doctor in decision making | To reveal expectations |
| To check understanding of information | |
| To make sure that decisions can be revised | |
| To provide neutral insight into survival with or without disabilities | |
| To make explicit whether parents want a role in decision making | |
| To inform that no precise outcome predictions are possible (general statistics vs. individual prognoses) | |
| To protect parents against unrealistic expectations | |
| To reveal what parents values are in life and what parents need (from the doctor) to engage in decision making (doctors role is not to have 50% input!) | |
| To explore and check a decision that was already made | |
| To explicitly inform that a prenatal decision needs to be made | |
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