Literature DB >> 33415467

Parental presence during pediatric retrieval: the caregiver's perspective.

Noemie Capucine Lefevre1, Lucie Jarrier1, Audrey Normand1, Daniele De Luca1, Gilles Jourdain2.   

Abstract

The presence of family at the bedside of critically ill children is recommended, as part of "family-centered care." The study aimed to understand if such recommendation was applied by our neonatal and pediatric retrieval team and the second aim was their perception of parental presence. We first conducted a 6-month monocentric prospective observational study where the transport teams had to rate parental presence after each retrieval. A second survey was filled out by all team members, to explore their perception of parental presence in a general manner, without referring to a specific transport. Three hundred seventeen questionnaires from the prospective survey were returned, with parents being present in the ambulance for 47% of retrievals. There was a significant difference in parental accompaniment between newborns (< 24 h) and older children. The parental presence was rated as neutral or positive for 99% of transportation, whereas approximately ¼ of the crew feared "a priori" parental presence during transport in the second survey.
Conclusion: This study suggests at least one parent was present at almost half of the retrievals conducted in our sample during the study period. Very few negative experiences were reported in the prospective study by the caregivers who allowed parental presence. What is Known: •The concept of family-centered care is an approach that recognizes the importance of family engagement and involvement and encourages collaboration between families and healthcare professionals. •Parents wish to accompany their child. What is New: •The perception of parental presence, by transport team members, was neutral or positive in 99% of retrievals during the study. •Newborns' parents were less present during retrieval than older children's parents.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Caregivers; Child; Family-centered care; Newborn; Parental presence; Retrieval team

Year:  2021        PMID: 33415467     DOI: 10.1007/s00431-020-03893-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Pediatr        ISSN: 0340-6199            Impact factor:   3.183


  1 in total

1.  "The worst journey of our lives": parents' experiences of a specialised paediatric retrieval service.

Authors:  Gillian Colville; Fiona Orr; David Gracey
Journal:  Intensive Crit Care Nurs       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 3.072

  1 in total

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