| Literature DB >> 28947440 |
Sally Rebecca Bradshaw1, Karen Shaw1, Danai Bem1, Carole Cummins1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Less than 1% of children have complex medical conditions but account for one-third of all child health spending. The impact of suboptimal management of this group of children can have a considerable effect on families as well as services. Some families appear to cope more easily than others do, but there are compelling reasons to suggest that effective interventions may improve family coping and ultimately outcomes. Hospitalisation of their child presents a unique set of pressures and challenges for parents, but also an opportunity to intervene. However, the evidence is not well described in relation to this group of families. The primary objective of this scoping review is to identify parent and family-based interventions available to improve parental health, well-being, functioning or skills in the context of a child's medically complex hospital admission and hospital care. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Nine bibliographic databases will be searched spanning medicine, nursing, psychology, education, social work and the grey literature using a combination of index terms and text words related to parents, childhood, chronic illness and interventions. Study eligibility will be assessed by two researchers against preset inclusion and exclusion criteria. Key information from each study will be extracted and charted including year of publication, condition, severity, geographical setting, key concepts and definitions, aims, study population and sample size, methodology/methods, interventions, outcomes and key findings. Directed qualitative content analysis will be used to make sense of narrative findings within the included studies. Results will be presented which summarise the scope of the literature and identify key findings, potential areas for evidence synthesis and research gaps. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethical approval is not required. The results of this review will be disseminated through publication in a peer-reviewed journal and feedback to stakeholders during the development of a hospital-based intervention. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.Entities:
Keywords: children; chronic illness; interventions; parents; scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28947440 PMCID: PMC5623464 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-015242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Population, intervention, comparator, outcome statement
| Population | Parent of children with special healthcare needs |
| Intervention | Any parent or family-based intervention |
| Comparator | Usual care or any other comparator |
| Outcome | Improved parenting health, well-being, functioning or skills |
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | |
| Types of studies | Any reports of interventions using a recognised study design (including primary or secondary research). |
| Setting | Studies undertaken in any research setting (eg, acute, primary care, community) will be included, as long as the intervention could potentially be delivered within routine care in an acute setting. |
| Population | ‘Parent’ may include anyone with parenting responsibility. |
| Intervention | Interventions must include parents directly. They may include only parents or parents alongside children and/or other family members. |
| Outcomes | Improved parent–child attachment or parenting health, well-being, functioning or skills. |
Studies on attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, autism, depression or other mental health conditions in the absence of comorbidities. Any studies which do not report parent outcomes. Interventions that are not adaptable to delivery by generalist healthcare staff or lay workers (eg, specialist psychotherapy techniques). Studies which use parent-based interventions but only measure child well-being or disease related outcomes such as medication adherence. Studies that focus on acute conditions only (eg, acute pneumonia). Studies that focus only on end of life care. | |
Key word search terms
| Key concept | Keywords |
| Parents | Parent, mother, father, carer, guardian |
| Child | Child, school child, kid, toddler, teen, boy, girl, minor, underage, juvenile, youth, puberty, pubescent, prepubescent, paediatric, paediatric, school, adolescent |
| Chronic childhood disease | Chronic, long term, activity limiting, disease, illness, disorder, condition, sickness, pain |
| Interventions to improve well-being | Intervention, therapy, trial, review, meta-analysis |