| Literature DB >> 35493542 |
Janet Mattson1,2, Johan Lunnelie1, Tim Löfholm1, Elina Scheers Andersson1, Ragnhild E Aune3, Gunilla Björling1,4,5.
Abstract
Introduction: Home mechanical ventilation is an established method to support children suffering from chronic respiratory insufficiency, still more research is needed regarding mechanically ventilated children's and adolescents' quality of life (QoL). Therefore, the aim of this scoping review was to explore research regarding QoL and lived experience of children and adolescents with home mechanical ventilation.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents and children; home mechanical ventilation; parent-proxy; quality of life; respiratory insufficiency
Year: 2022 PMID: 35493542 PMCID: PMC9047042 DOI: 10.1177/23779608221094522
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Nurs ISSN: 2377-9608
Figure 1.Framework of scoping review as described by Arksey and O’Malley (2005).
Figure 2.Database search flowchart.
Studies Included in the Review.
| Authors, Titles, Journal, Year, Country | Aim | Design | Method | Results | Quality | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| de Oliveira, F. S., Vasconcelos, V. M., Martins, M. C., & Lúcio, I. M. L. Care to Child with Muscular Dystrophies Dependent of Home Technology: Mothers’ Conception. | To understand mothers’ experience of caring for a technology-dependent child and their perceptions’ of the child's QoL. | Descriptive study with a qualitative approach | Data selection: 11 mothers of children with Muscular Dystrophy, aged between 19 and 40 years Data collection: Semi-structured interviews Data Analysis: Referential thematic analysis | Mothers express the negative impact that respirators and other technological devices related to HMV have on their own and the children's QoL. Both anxiety and fear of death are factors that have a direct impact on the QoL. | Moderate quality | |
| González, R. et al. Quality of life in home-ventilated children and their families. | To assess perceived QoL in children on HMV and their families and explore problems in their daily life related to HMV. | Cross-sectional study with qualitative and quantitative approach | Data Selection: 41 children aged 1 month to 18 years, with their parents/caregiver Data collection: Semi-structured interview questionnaires and evaluation of perceived QoL by patients and their family (PedsQL 4.0) Data Analysis: Semi-quantitative analysis. | All the participating families were content with the care they gave their children, still they witnessed about how emotionally overwhelming the situation was. | High quality | |
| Graham, R., Rodday, A., & Parsons, S. Family-Centered Assessment and Function for Children With Chronic Mechanical Respiratory Support. | To assess parents’ HRQoL when caring for a child with CRI being treated at home. | A quantitative cross-sectional study | Data Selection: 86 parents/caregivers of children home-based management of CRI. Data Collection: CHRI questionnaire together with global HRQL scale (Global-5). Data analysis: The response for the parents were analysed with Wilcoxon rank sum test or x2 test | Although the children's global HRQoL score was low (63.1, SD = 24.9), the score of “family life” were higher (73.8, SD = 26.5). In parents, both these measures were low. | High quality, low risk for bias | |
| Mah, J., Thannhauser, J., Mcneil, D., & Dewey, D. Being the lifeline: The parent experience of caring for a child with neuromuscular disease on home mechanical ventilation. | Parents’ experiences living with a child treated with HMV | Phenomenological study with qualitative approach | Data Selection: 15 mothers and 4 fathers of children with HMV Data Collection: Semi-structured interviews in the participants homes Data Analysis: Downloaded into NVivo 7.0TM (qualitative computer software) for analysis. Subcategory for coding, then topic and coding to identify themes. | Parents express feelings of being the lifeline for their child's life and QoL. The initiation of HMV in their child resulted in changes in their daily lives. Changes, that over time became the new ‘normal’. | High Quality | |
| Noyes, J. Health and quality of life of ventilator-dependent children. | Children's lived experiences on QoL and living with HMV, and their parents’ experiences. | Heideggerian phenomenology with qualitative approach. | Data Selection: 53 children and their parents Data collection: Semi-structured interviews in the participants homes Data analysis: Tape recorded, transcribed and anonymized. “Framework” approach for analysis (guiding). Heidegger's circle for themes analysis in order to get correct descriptions participants experiences. | The themes gave some common features in all participants. The children felt better when they had the ventilation, they had enough air for breathing, rendering a better QoL. It was not possible to get an understanding on how much more they gained in QoL, especially amongst those who could not communicate by speech or those with severe neurological impairment. | High Quality | |
| Noyes, J. Comparison of ventilator-dependent child reports of health-related quality of life with parent reports and normative populations. | To report ventilator-dependent children's and their parents’ perceived HRQoL using a validated instrument. | Case study with a quantitative approach. | Data Selection: 35 ventilator-dependent children and their parents. Data Collection: KINDL questionnaire was used to measure various dimensions of QoL. Data Analysis: Descriptive statistics were determined from all variable | The ventilator-dependent children who participated in this study reported a significantly lower HRQoL overall, compared to school children.in general. Parents and children rated the children's overall HRQoL the same but parents reported lower scores on their child's underlying disease and relation with friends | Moderate Quality, bias may exist | |
| Rodday, A. M., Graham, R. J., Weidner, R. A., Terrin, N., Leslie, L. K., & Parsons, S. K. Predicting Health Care Utilization for Children With Respiratory Insufficiency Using Parent-Proxy Ratings of Children's Health-Related Quality of Life. | To determine if parent-proxy reports of children's HRQoL affected future health care utilization. Furthermore, to get an understanding if these parent-proxy reports contribute with additional information that may help predicting future health care needs | Longitudinal study with quantitative approach | Data Selection: 140 patients aged 30 days to 22 years, and their parents/caregivers. Data Collection: CHRI questionnaire with both child and parent version was used to collect parent-proxy reports. Data Analysis: To identify differences in the responds regarding various of factors Wilcoxon rank sum test and chi-square test were used | Three quarters of the participating children utilized healthcare and 32% were hospitalized. Children who reported poor/fair global HRQoL had 3.7 times more documented days in hospital care compared to those who reported good/excellent global HRQoL. | High quality, low risk for bias | |
| Sarvey, S. I. Living with a machine: the experience of the child who is ventilator dependent. | To obtain and reflect the first-person perspective of children's experience of being ventilator-dependent. | Phenomenological interviews with a qualitative approach. | Data Selection: 9 children who were ventilator-dependent for at least eight hours eper day. Data Collection: Phenomenological interviews that was tape-recorded and transcribed verbatim.. Data Analysis: The collected data was analysed using a hermeneutic method, which generated a thematic structure. | Common for all the participating children was a feeling of never being alone. They expressed feelings of being dependent on both the people who cared for them and the machines that kept them alive. | Moderate quality | |
| Seear, M., Kapur, A., Wensley, D., Morrison, K., & Behroozi, A. The quality of life of home-ventilated children and their primary caregivers plus the associated social and economic burdens: A prospective study. | To assess the impact of home ventilation in children and their QoL. | A prospective study with a quantitative approach. | Data Selection: 90 families with a child treated with home ventilation. Data Collection: PedsQL were used to measure QoL in the participating children. Caregiver Impact Scale (CIS) were used to measure how the main caregiver was affected by home ventilation. Data was collected via telephone after one and two months. Data Analysis: All collected data were managed using non-parametric methods. | Most of the participating children and families had active lives, such as wheelchair sports and vacations abroad. The burden of care was reported as mild/moderate by over 90% of the participants. Among the primary caregivers, nearly 25% reported the burden of care as severe. | High quality, low risk for bias | |
| Spratling, R. The experiences of medically fragile adolescents who require respiratory assistance. | Respiratory assistant adolescents experiences on their own life. | Interpretive phenomenology study with qualitative approach. | Data selection: 11 adolescents from southeast USA Data collection: Semi-structured interviews with adolescents in their homes Data Analysis: Audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. The interviews were summarized, coded and evaluated for emerging themes. Found themes were validated with participants and within the research team. | Five themes emerged from the interviews: ‘Get to know me’, ‘Allow me to be myself’, ‘Being there for me’, ‘No matter what, technology helps’ and ‘I am an independent person’. | High quality | |
Theme Matrix.
| Author | Children's self-reported QoL | Parents’ perception and parent-proxy report | Differences between the child's and parents’ perception | Challenges in daily life |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| de Oliveira et al. (2013) | X | X | ||
|
| X | X | X | X |
|
| X | X | ||
|
| X | X | ||
|
| X | X | X | |
|
| X | X | X | |
| Rodday et al. (2017) | X | |||
|
| X | X | ||
|
| X | X | X | |
|
| X | X |