| Literature DB >> 29978021 |
Georgia Michalopoulou1, Sherylyn Briller2,3, Kimberly Compton Katzer2, Kaitlin C Muklewicz2, Julia Wasiluk4, Beverly Crider4, Stephanie Myers-Schim5,6, Elizabeth Secord7.
Abstract
Family-centered care (FCC) is vital for children with special health-care needs and serious chronic illnesses. Family-clinician collaboration and partnership formation are key FCC elements associated with improved health outcomes. However, FCC implementation barriers persist. Although some ethnographic research examines how FCC principles align with practice in inpatient settings, more studies are needed in outpatient specialty clinics. Using an FCC-oriented research team (clinicians, social science researchers, and families) blended multidisciplinary clinical knowledge and family/patient expertise with chronic illness. Our ethnographic study in a high-risk asthma outpatient clinic examined how FCC principles align with clinical practice, identified factors affecting partnership, and compared our findings to a large ethnographic study in an inpatient setting. Qualitative data from direct observation of 14 families with lengthy clinic visits were analyzed. Codes were applied to themes using FCC principles. Clinic visits had interactional and contextual elements that both aligned and misaligned with key FCC principles: information sharing, respect, participation, and collaboration. Recommendations for advancing FCC are outlined, and the importance of this step in light of ongoing health disparities is addressed.Entities:
Keywords: asthma management; collaboration; family-centered care; partnership
Year: 2017 PMID: 29978021 PMCID: PMC6022945 DOI: 10.1177/2374373517723322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Exp ISSN: 2374-3735
Patient Characteristics.a
| Gender | |
| Male | 10 |
| Female | 4 |
| Age | |
| Average age, years | 10.7 |
| Range of ages, years | 1.5-16 |
| Cultural self-identification | |
| African American | 13 |
| Arab American | 1 |
| Length of clinic relationship | |
| New patients | 3 |
| Long-term relationship | 11 |
an = 14.
FCC Principles and Practices Alignment.
| FCC Principles | High-Quality Practices Aligned With FCC Principles | Low-Quality Practices Misaligned With FCC Principles |
|---|---|---|
| Clear and open information sharing with patients and family members | Information sharing is improved when age-appropriate explanations and guidance are given | Information sharing is lacking when patients/families or clinicians are left with questions or misunderstandings about previously discussed topics |
| Respect for patients and family members | Seeking to understand changing family dynamics in an empathic and nonjudgmental manner can build rapport and respect | Misunderstandings and assumptions about family dynamics can be perceived as disrespectful |
| Participation of patients and family members | Participation is increased when a family has opportunities to ask questions and have them answered thoughtfully | Participation can be negatively impacted by a family’s unwillingness to work with particular clinicians or respond to questions Preoccupation with other things like phones interfered |
| Collaboration with patients and family members (especially around treatment plan decision-making) | Collaboration is aided when the medical team is willing to listen to and consider the patient’s point of view regarding treatment | Collaboration is hindered by distractions and a lack of clear communication and information sharing |
Abbreviation: FCC, family-centered care.