| Literature DB >> 34362206 |
Alexander Kovacevic1, Stefan Bär2, Sebastian Starystach2,3, Michael Elsässer4, Thomas van der Locht1, Aida Mohammadi Motlagh5,6, Eva Ostermayer7, Renate Oberhoffer-Fritz5,6, Peter Ewert6, Matthias Gorenflo1, Annette Wacker-Gussmann5,6.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic impacts health care providers in multiple ways, even specialties that do not seem to be affected primarily, such as fetal cardiac services. We aimed to assess the effects on parental counseling for fetal congenital heart disease (CHD). In this multicenter study, we used a validated questionnaire. Parents were recruited from four national tertiary medical care centers (n = 226); n = 169 had been counseled before and n = 57 during the pandemic. Overall counseling success including its dimensions did not differ between the two groups (p = n.s.). However, by applying the sorrow scale, we could demonstrate that parents counseled during the pandemic were significantly more concerned (p = 0.025) and unsure (p = 0.044) about their child's diagnosis, therapy and outcome. Furthermore, parents expressed a significantly increased need for written and/or online information on fetal heart disease (p = 0.034). Other modifiers did not affect counseling success (p = n.s.). We demonstrate that the COVID-19 pandemic impacts effectiveness of parental counseling for fetal CHD, possibly by altering parental perceptions. This needs to be taken into consideration when counseling. Implementing alternative and innovative approaches (e.g., online conference or virtual reality tools) may aid in facilitating high-quality services in critical times such as in the present pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic; fetal congenital heart disease; parental counseling; prenatal diagnosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34362206 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10153423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241