K R Delaney1, B Engels-Scianna. 1. Children's Inpatient Unit, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA.
Abstract
PROBLEM: The purpose of this study was to describe how parents define their child's emotional illness and psychiatric treatment needs. SUBJECTS: The sample consisted of 19 parents and one grandparent (N = 20) who had recently admitted their child to a short-term psychiatric unit. METHODS: Qualitative methods, utilizing a semistructured interview. Data were analyzed using the constant comparative method. Substantive codes were combined to derive the key concepts and themes in the interviews. FINDINGS: The findings of this study center on themes related to parents' efforts to control the current behavioral crisis, treatment acceptability, family needs, explanatory formulations, and securing the child's future. CONCLUSIONS: Implications for treatment include how nurses might tap into parents' perceptions to facilitate parent' professional communication.
PROBLEM: The purpose of this study was to describe how parents define their child's emotional illness and psychiatric treatment needs. SUBJECTS: The sample consisted of 19 parents and one grandparent (N = 20) who had recently admitted their child to a short-term psychiatric unit. METHODS: Qualitative methods, utilizing a semistructured interview. Data were analyzed using the constant comparative method. Substantive codes were combined to derive the key concepts and themes in the interviews. FINDINGS: The findings of this study center on themes related to parents' efforts to control the current behavioral crisis, treatment acceptability, family needs, explanatory formulations, and securing the child's future. CONCLUSIONS: Implications for treatment include how nurses might tap into parents' perceptions to facilitate parent' professional communication.
Authors: Andrew M Garratt; Oyvind A Bjertnaes; Olaf Holmboe; Ketil Hanssen-Bauer Journal: Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health Date: 2011-05-21 Impact factor: 3.033