| Literature DB >> 34282509 |
Andrea J Chow1, Michael Pugliese1, Laure A Tessier2, Pranesh Chakraborty2,3, Ryan Iverson1,2, Doug Coyle1, Jonathan B Kronick4, Kumanan Wilson5, Robin Hayeems6, Walla Al-Hertani7, Michal Inbar-Feigenberg4, Shailly Jain-Ghai8, Anne-Marie Laberge9, Julian Little1, John J Mitchell10, Chitra Prasad11, Komudi Siriwardena8, Rebecca Sparkes12, Kathy N Speechley13, Sylvia Stockler14, Yannis Trakadis10, Jagdeep S Walia15, Brenda J Wilson16, Beth K Potter17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34282509 PMCID: PMC8289623 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-021-00538-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Groupings of categorical variables
| Variable grouping | Variable categories |
|---|---|
| Satisfied | Somewhat satisfied Very satisfied |
| Non-satisfied | Neither satisfied nor dissatisfied Somewhat dissatisfied Very dissatisfied |
| Larger communities | Large city (population of ≥ 100,000 people) Medium-sized city (population of ≥ 30,000 and < 100,000 people) |
| Smaller communities | Small community (population of ≥ 1000 and < 30,000 people) Rural area (population of < 1000 people) |
| Fewer | 1–2 times (metabolic clinic, emergency department, blood laboratory) Once or less than once per month (pharmacy) Once (hospitalizations) |
| More | 3 or more times (metabolic clinic, emergency department, blood laboratory) At least once per month (pharmacy) 2 or more times (hospitalizations) |
Participant, household, and child characteristics
| No. (%)a | |
|---|---|
| Gender and relationship to childb ( | |
| Female, biological parent | 207 (84) |
| Age, years ( | |
| 20–29 | 20 (8) |
| 30–39 | 124 (50) |
| 40 or older | 103 (42) |
| Working part/full time ( | 179 (72) |
| Highest education level completed ( | |
| High school or less | 35 (14) |
| Vocational/technical training | 18 (7) |
| College/university | 147 (60) |
| Graduate school | 43 (18) |
| Community size ( | |
| Large city (≥100,000 people) | 130 (53) |
| Medium city (30,000–100,000 people) | 42 (17) |
| Small community (1000–30,000 people) | 54 (22) |
| Rural or very small community (<1000 people) | 18 (7) |
| Household income ( | |
| < $40,000 | 26 (11) |
| $40,000–$59,999 | 24 (10) |
| $60,000–$79,999 | 23 (10) |
| $80,000–$99,999 | 38 (16) |
| $100,000 or more | 124 (53) |
| Distance from home to the metabolic clinic ( | |
| < 30 min | 55 (24) |
| 30 min to < 1 h | 65 (28) |
| 1–2 h | 72 (31) |
| > 2 h | 38 (17) |
| Mode of transportation to metabolic clinic ( | |
| Personal vehicle | 216 (94) |
| Public transit or other | 14 (6) |
| Assigned sex, femalee | 127 (51) |
| Birth year | |
| 2005–7 | 50 (20) |
| 2008–9 | 45 (18) |
| 2010–11 | 36 (15) |
| 2012–13 | 53 (21) |
| 2014–15 | 64 (26) |
| Inherited metabolic disease | |
| Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency | 56 (23) |
| Phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency | 56 (23) |
| Organic acid disorders | 24 (10) |
| Galactosemia | 15 (6) |
| Multiple carboxylase deficiency or biotinidase deficiency | 32 (13) |
| Other fatty acid oxidation disorders | 24 (10) |
| Other amino acid disorders | 12 (5) |
| Other disorders | 29 (12) |
aValid percentages presented
bRemaining participants were male or other gender and/or other relationship to child
cRemaining participants were not working or looking for work
dOnly participants who had visited the metabolic clinic for their child’s care in the past year were asked this question
eRemaining participants were male or undetermined
Satisfaction with healthcare for children with inherited metabolic diseases by health service setting
| Satisfieda with care at | % (95% confidence interval)b | |
| Metabolic clinic | ||
| Overall | 194/230 | 84 (79–89) |
| Stratified by community sizec | ||
| Larger | 143/163 | 88 (82–92) |
| Smaller | 49/64 | 77 (65–86) |
| Stratified by visit frequencyd | ||
| Fewer | 149/178 | 84 (78–89) |
| More | 45/52 | 87 (75–94) |
| Stratified by age group, yearse | ||
| < 5 | 82/97 | 85 (76–91) |
| ≥ 5 | 112/133 | 84 (77–90) |
| Emergency department | ||
| Overall | 55/80 | 69 (58–78) |
| Stratified by community sizec | ||
| Larger | 43/60 | 72 (59–82) |
| Smaller | 10/18 | 56 (33–77) |
| Stratified by visit frequencyd | ||
| Fewer | 45/62 | 73 (61–83) |
| More | 10/18 | 56 (33–77) |
| Stratified by age group, yearse | ||
| < 5 | 28/37 | 76 (60–87) |
| ≥ 5 | 27/43 | 63 (48–76) |
| Blood laboratory | ||
| Overall | 162/208 | 78 (72–83) |
| Stratified by community sizec | ||
| Larger | 114/148 | 77 (70–83) |
| Smaller | 46/57 | 81 (69–89) |
| Stratified by visit frequencyd | ||
| Fewer | 107/138 | 78 (70–84) |
| More | 55/70 | 79 (68–87) |
| Stratified by age group, yearse | ||
| < 5 | 62/84 | 74 (64–82) |
| ≥5 | 100/124 | 81 (73–87) |
| Hospitalization | ||
| Overall | 32/46 | 70 (55–82) |
| Stratified by community sizec | ||
| Larger | 25/34 | 74 (57–86) |
| Smaller | 5/10 | 50 (21–79) |
| Stratified by visit frequencyd | ||
| Fewer | 21/32 | 66 (48–80) |
| More | 11/14 | 79 (52–94) |
| Stratified by age group, yearse | ||
| < 5 | 20/25 | 80 (61–92) |
| ≥ 5 | 12/21 | 57 (36–77) |
| Pharmacy | ||
| Overall | 138/174 | 79 (73–85) |
| Stratified by community sizec | ||
| Larger | 103/129 | 80 (72–86) |
| Smaller | 33/42 | 79 (64–89) |
| Stratified by visit frequencyd | ||
| Fewer | 102/128 | 80 (72–86) |
| More | 35/45 | 78 (64–88) |
| Stratified by age group, yearse | ||
| < 5 | 60/73 | 82 (72–90) |
| ≥ 5 | 78/101 | 77 (68–85) |
Study participants who had not visited the care setting at least once in the past year were excluded from analysis
aSelf-reported; defined as “very satisfied” and “somewhat satisfied”. Remaining participants were non-satisfied (neither satisfied nor dissatisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied)
bMid-P Exact Test
c“Larger” defined as “large city” and “medium-sized city”; “smaller” defined as “small community” and “rural area”
d“Fewer” defined as, over the past year: 1–2 times for metabolic clinic, emergency department, blood laboratory; 1 time to less than once per month for the pharmacy; 1 time for hospitalizations. “More” defined as: 3 or more times for metabolic clinic, emergency department, blood laboratory; at least once per month for pharmacy; 2 or more times for hospitalizations
eAge group defined at time of questionnaire mailout
Fig. 1a Importance of factors contributing to caregiver satisfaction with metabolic clinic care. b Importance of factors contributing to caregiver satisfaction with emergency department care. c Importance of factors contributing to caregiver satisfaction with blood laboratory care. d Importance of factors contributing to caregiver satisfaction with hospital inpatient care. e Importance of factors contributing to caregiver satisfaction with pharmacy services. HCP healthcare practitioner
Fig. 2Number and percent of participant-reported memorable experiences over the past year, at various healthcare settings
Most frequently coded aspects of care related to memorable experiences, by healthcare setting, and example quotations
| Setting | Example quotation | |
|---|---|---|
| Positive experience | ||
| HCP/staff had positive demeanor | 12 (41) | Every time we go they are so welcoming and make you feel comfortable. I couldn't ask for a better team |
| HCP/staff communicated well | 11 (38) | My son's care providers answer all of our questions patiently and professionally |
| HCP/staff involved the family in care | 5 (17) | I’m always so appreciative how ‘my team’ includes each of us (family of 4) in the care for my son (only one of us is the actual patient) |
| Negative experience | ||
| Poor follow-up care/communication | 6 (24) | We are disappointed that each time our daughter has her bloodwork done that we have to chase the team for results (>1 month after) even when results were abnormal |
| HCP/staff did not communicate well | 5 (20) | [The] dietician first appointed [was] very poor in answering basic dietary questions; [I] felt ‘disregarded’ with any of my concerns my child’s health and dietary needs |
| Child did not receive timely treatment or care | 4 (16) | Long wait time (2.5 hrs) from start to finish of appointment […] not really feeling as if anything was accomplished |
| HCP/staff lacked relevant skills/knowledge | 4 (16) | I asked the physician to examine my child’s feet, which had several problems: fungal nail infection, athlete’s foot, flaking. He told me: ‘It’s nothing, there’s nothing we can do for that.’ Fortunately I consulted another physician who took good care of all the health issues my child has |
| HCP/staff had negative demeanor | 4 (16) | The initial call I received when she was two days old still lingers in my memory. I was told to come to the hospital because my daughter has been identified through newborn screening as being mentally slow. Sensitivity during the initial call was lacking |
| Positive experience | ||
| Child received timely treatment or care | 5 (38) | We didn't wait too long in the emergency room. The metabolic doctor on call informed ER that my son who is metabolic is coming & there is no time to wait. Every minute is crucial |
| HCP/staff coordinated well with each other | 3 (23) | The communication and coordination between the genetics team and the emergency doctor were very satisfying |
| Negative experience | ||
| HCP/staff did not follow the emergency protocol letter | 5 (33) | Trauma situation with my child. Emergency room doctor refused to follow instructions for her care set out by the metabolic’s team. I had to call [Hospital] before care changed |
| HCP/staff lacked relevant skills/knowledge | 4 (27) | There was a major delay in treatment because of doctor lack of knowledge about disorder |
| HCP/staff did not involve the family in care | 3 (20) | I told the staff that her CK’s (creatine kinase) were up & they refused to […] listen to me until her CK’s came back at 60,000 |
| Wait time was too long | 3 (20) | Waiting 12 hours to be admitted and get our room |
| Positive experience | ||
| HCP/staff provided physical/emotional comfort to the child | 14 (54) | Nurses were very good with my child. They made [child] feel very comfortable even though [child] does not enjoy needles |
| HCP/staff had positive demeanor | 12 (46) | All lab technicians have been very sympathetic and caring. Very patient and understanding. Amazing staff |
| HCP/staff had relevant skills/knowledge | 6 (23) | The technician never misses the vein |
| Negative experience | ||
| Multiple blood draw attempts | 14 (47) | I am still thinking about it 1-1.5 years later […] One time she was in for 45 minutes, they tried 3 times as she was screaming away and failed to collect the sample after the third [time] so we had to come back 3 days later. She was bruised all up her arms. It haunts me to this day |
| Wait time was too long | 7 (23) | Kids have already been fasting for hours when we arrive at the lab and then the wait is almost always another hour |
| Blood draw was not done correctly/successfully | 5 (17) | Having to dig in her arm for over a minute with the wrong size + being unsuccessful. Then trying 2 more times in 2 different places finally with the correct needle size |
| Positive experience | ||
| HCP/staff had positive demeanor | 3 (38) | Seeing the same staff who [...] remember us and are comfortable communicating with us make hospital stays positive and easy - sometimes fun. Staff not assigned to us or at the end of shifts dropping in to say hi and check on us also help when in isolation and [it’s] hard to leave [the] room |
| Negative experience | ||
| HCP/staff had negative demeanor | 3 (30) | The metabolic intern was arrogant […] Also he kept pushing my child to eat - to the point of nearly shaming her. She was very nauseous with rotavirus |
| Positive experience | ||
| Received product in a timely manner | 7 (41) | Knowing that our child needs the medication, they now stock a small amount and, when ordered, will get it within a couple of days, notifying us when it arrives |
| HCP/staff exceeded the expectations of their role | 6 (35) | Our local pharmacy is a compounding pharmacy; they did an excellent job researching the drugs use in order to not have ‘phe’ contained in our [child]'s prescription. The pharmacy technician also uploaded a page from the ‘PKU Food List book’ which lists drugs containing Phe. It is recorded on my [child]'s file as a caution that she has PKU ‘NO ASPARTAME’ |
| HCP/staff had positive demeanor | 6 (35) | Pharmacy staff treated us like family […] Their attitude was extremely friendly and they went out of their way to be helpful |
| Negative experience | ||
| Did not receive product in a timely manner | 8 (62) | I have found that every time (or almost) I order my child supplements they are back ordered and by the time I finally get them I have multiple cases that expire in 3 weeks |
| Errors made in filling the order | 5 (38) | Repeated errors […] refill not processed […] |
Codes with n < 3 not shown. Percentages may not add to 100; multiple codes may be applied to each participant statement
CK creatine kinase, ER emergency room, HCP healthcare provider, PKU phenylketonuria
Measure of Processes of Care (MPOC) scale scores for participant perceptions of the extent of family-centered care at the metabolic clinic in the past year, overall and stratified by key variables
| Enabling and partnership | Providing general information | Providing specific information about the child | Coordinated and comprehensive care | Respectful and supportive care | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median (IQR) | Median (IQR) | Median (IQR) | Median (IQR) | Median (IQR) | ||||||
| Overall | 209 | 6.00 (2.00) | 201 | 4.00 (3.10) | 208 | 5.00 (3.00) | 224 | 5.75 (2.00) | 226 | 6.20 (1.60) |
| Satisfaction with clinic carea | ||||||||||
| Non-satisfied | 31 | 4.00 (2.33) | 31 | 2.60 (2.20) | 32 | 3.58 (2.50) | 32 | 4.00 (1.75) | 32 | 4.40 (2.50) |
| Satisfied | 170 | 6.00 (2.00) | 162 | 4.20 (2.80) | 169 | 5.67 (2.67) | 184 | 6.13 (1.75) | 185 | 6.40 (1.40) |
| | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | |||||
| Community sizec | ||||||||||
| Larger community | 145 | 6.00 (2.00) | 137 | 4.00 (3.00) | 146 | 5.33 (2.67) | 156 | 6.00 (2.00) | 155 | 6.40 (1.60) |
| Smaller community | 61 | 5.33 (2.34) | 61 | 3.80 (3.20) | 59 | 5.00 (2.67) | 65 | 5.75 (2.25) | 67 | 5.80 (2.20) |
| | 0.045 | 0.530 | 0.058 | 0.127 | 0.062 | |||||
| Travel time to the metabolic clinic | ||||||||||
| < 30 min | 46 | 6.00 (2.33) | 46 | 3.90 (2.40) | 46 | 5.17 (3.67) | 51 | 5.75 (2.25) | 51 | 6.60 (1.40) |
| ≥ 30 min to < 1 h | 57 | 5.67 (3.00) | 51 | 4.00 (3.00) | 55 | 5.67 (3.34) | 60 | 6.25 (2.00) | 59 | 6.40 (2.20) |
| ≥ 1–2 h | 64 | 6.00 (1.67) | 62 | 4.40 (3.40) | 65 | 5.50 (2.67) | 69 | 5.75 (1.50) | 69 | 6.00 (1.40) |
| > 2 h | 34 | 5.50 (2.34) | 34 | 3.40 (2.20) | 35 | 4.67 (2.34) | 36 | 5.50 (2.75) | 38 | 5.60 (2.00) |
| | 0.348 | 0.507 | 0.234 | 0.386 | 0.336 | |||||
Scores may range from 1 to 7; higher scores indicate that a provider/clinic exhibits a behavior/activity to a greater extent
IQR interquartile range
aSelf-reported; represents “very satisfied” and “somewhat satisfied”
bMann–Whitney U/Wilcoxon rank-sum test, two-sided normally approximated p-values
c“Larger” represents “large city” and “medium-sized city”; “smaller” represents “small community” and “rural area”
dKruskal–Wallis test
Family experiences with care coordination measure scores for community service use and coordination of healthcare in the past year
aValid percentages reported
| This study identifies several elements of care that contribute to parents’ satisfaction with healthcare across five healthcare settings commonly visited by children with inherited metabolic diseases (IMD), including receipt of appropriate treatment, provider knowledge and communication, and coordinated care. |
| While generally satisfied with care, parents of children with IMD reported recent memorable negative experiences with their child’s healthcare, particularly in the emergency department and during hospitalization. These negative experiences were often related to poor provider demeanor, lack of communication, poor involvement of the family, and disregard of emergency protocol letters. |
| Our findings provide an important foundation for understanding where gaps in family-centered healthcare are for children with IMD, informing the development of interventions and strategies to address those gaps and ultimately improve healthcare for children with IMD. |