| Literature DB >> 29807461 |
Mandie Foster1, Lisa Whitehead2.
Abstract
Family- and child-centred care are philosophies of care used within paediatrics where the family and/or the child are central to healthcare delivery. This study explored the lived experience of hospitalized school-aged children admitted to a paediatric high dependency unit in New Zealand to gain insight into child-centred care from a child's perspective. An interpretive thematic approach was used where the child was asked to draw a picture of 'a person in the hospital' that was further explored through interviews. The interviews were recorded and transcribed verbatim with an inductive thematic analysis completed, drawing on the child-centred care framework. Twenty-six school-aged children participated. The pictures included drawings of family, staff, children and themselves. The themes generated from the interviews were relationships with themselves, family and staff and psychosocial, emotional and physical support. Children described themselves as co-creators of their own healthcare experience, consistent with child-centred care, while drawing on the principles of family-centred care. Further exploration of the concepts of 'participation versus protection' and 'child as becoming versus child as being' will contribute to translation and integration of child-centred care and family-centred care principles into practice, theory, research and policy.Entities:
Keywords: Children’s participation; family-centred care; nurse–child relationships; nurse–family relationships; paediatric
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29807461 DOI: 10.1177/1367493518778389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Health Care ISSN: 1367-4935 Impact factor: 1.979