Zainab Alzawad1, Frances Marcus Lewis2, LizAnne Ngo3, Karen Thomas4. 1. The University of Iowa, College of Nursing - 322 CNB, Iowa City, IA 52242, United States. Electronic address: zainab-alzawad@uiowa.edu. 2. University of Washington, Dept Child, Family and Population Health Nursing, United States; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, United States. 3. University of Washington, College of Education, United States. 4. Seattle Children's Hospital, United States.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: This exploratory study (a) examined pre-existing and peri-trauma risk factors of parental stress during a child's PICU hospitalisation using the Integrative Trajectory Model of Paediatric Medical Traumatic Stress and (b) identified the type of PICU-related stressors that predicted parental stress during the child's PICU hospitalisation. METHODS: A cross-sectional, descriptive correlational design with 81 parents of children admitted 48 or more hours to a Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU). Questionnaires measured parent's and child's demographic and clinical characteristics and parent-reported stressors using the Parental Stressors Scale (PSS:PICU). Analysis included descriptive statistics and multiple linear regression analyses with simultaneous predictor entry. RESULTS: Male parents tended to be significantly more stressed than female parents. Parental stress was significantly increased when parents had one or more stressful life events one-month prior to PICU admission, when the child required ventilatory support, or the child had a cardiovascular diagnosis. Parental stress was also predicted by the child's appearance, procedures, child's behaviour, behaviour of staff, and parental role. CONCLUSION: Nurses are in a prime position to identify parents at potentially high risk for psychological morbidity when they know a parent has had a stressful life event prior to admission, has a child with a cardiovascular diagnosis or requires ventilatory assistance. Nurses can diminish parental stress by interpreting the child's appearance for parents, helping parents understand the procedures being done for the child, interpreting the child's behaviour, explaining the staff's behaviour, and assisting parents to define their parental role during the child's hospitalisation.
OBJECTIVES: This exploratory study (a) examined pre-existing and peri-trauma risk factors of parental stress during a child's PICU hospitalisation using the Integrative Trajectory Model of Paediatric Medical Traumatic Stress and (b) identified the type of PICU-related stressors that predicted parental stress during the child's PICU hospitalisation. METHODS: A cross-sectional, descriptive correlational design with 81 parents of children admitted 48 or more hours to a Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU). Questionnaires measured parent's and child's demographic and clinical characteristics and parent-reported stressors using the Parental Stressors Scale (PSS:PICU). Analysis included descriptive statistics and multiple linear regression analyses with simultaneous predictor entry. RESULTS: Male parents tended to be significantly more stressed than female parents. Parental stress was significantly increased when parents had one or more stressful life events one-month prior to PICU admission, when the child required ventilatory support, or the child had a cardiovascular diagnosis. Parental stress was also predicted by the child's appearance, procedures, child's behaviour, behaviour of staff, and parental role. CONCLUSION: Nurses are in a prime position to identify parents at potentially high risk for psychological morbidity when they know a parent has had a stressful life event prior to admission, has a child with a cardiovascular diagnosis or requires ventilatory assistance. Nurses can diminish parental stress by interpreting the child's appearance for parents, helping parents understand the procedures being done for the child, interpreting the child's behaviour, explaining the staff's behaviour, and assisting parents to define their parental role during the child's hospitalisation.
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