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Family caregivers’ emotional and communication needs in Canadian pediatric emergency departments

OBJECTIVES: To describe the extent to which caregivers’ emotional and communication needs were met during pediatric emergency department (PED) visits. Secondary objectives included describing the association of caregiver emotional needs, satisfaction with care, and comfort in caring for their child’...

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Autores principales: Ali, Samina, Maki, Claudia, Rahimi, Asa, Ma, Keon, Yaskina, Maryna, Wong, Helen, Stang, Antonia, Principi, Tania, Poonai, Naveen, Gouin, Serge, Froese R. N., Sylvia, Clerc, Paul, Carciumaru, Redjana, Alqurashi, Waleed, Rajagopal, Manasi, Kammerer, Elise, Leung, Julie, Wright, Bruce, Scott, Shannon D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10664925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37992020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0294597
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author Ali, Samina
Maki, Claudia
Rahimi, Asa
Ma, Keon
Yaskina, Maryna
Wong, Helen
Stang, Antonia
Principi, Tania
Poonai, Naveen
Gouin, Serge
Froese R. N., Sylvia
Clerc, Paul
Carciumaru, Redjana
Alqurashi, Waleed
Rajagopal, Manasi
Kammerer, Elise
Leung, Julie
Wright, Bruce
Scott, Shannon D.
author_facet Ali, Samina
Maki, Claudia
Rahimi, Asa
Ma, Keon
Yaskina, Maryna
Wong, Helen
Stang, Antonia
Principi, Tania
Poonai, Naveen
Gouin, Serge
Froese R. N., Sylvia
Clerc, Paul
Carciumaru, Redjana
Alqurashi, Waleed
Rajagopal, Manasi
Kammerer, Elise
Leung, Julie
Wright, Bruce
Scott, Shannon D.
author_sort Ali, Samina
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: To describe the extent to which caregivers’ emotional and communication needs were met during pediatric emergency department (PED) visits. Secondary objectives included describing the association of caregiver emotional needs, satisfaction with care, and comfort in caring for their child’s illness at the time of discharge with demographic characteristics, caregiver experiences, and ED visit details. STUDY DESIGN: Electronic surveys with medical record review were deployed at ten Canadian PEDs from October 2018 –March 2020. A convenience sample of families with children <18 years presenting to a PED were enrolled, for one week every three months, for one year per site. Caregivers completed one in-PED survey and a follow-up survey, up to seven days post-visit. RESULTS: This study recruited 2005 caregivers who self-identified as mothers (74.3%, 1462/1969); mean age was 37.8 years (SD 7.7). 71.7% (1081/1507) of caregivers felt their emotional needs were met. 86.4% (1293/1496) identified communication with the doctor as good/very good and 83.4% (1249/1498) with their child’s nurse. Caregiver involvement in their child’s care was reported as good/very good 85.6% (1271/1485) of the time. 81.8% (1074/1313) of caregivers felt comfortable in caring for their child at home at the time of discharge. Lower caregiver anxiety scores, caregiver involvement in their child’s care, satisfactory updates, and having questions adequately addressed positively impacted caregiver emotional needs and increased caregiver comfort in caring for their child’s illness at home. CONCLUSION: Approximately 30% of caregivers presenting to PEDs have unmet emotional needs, over 15% had unmet communication needs, and 15% felt inadequately involved in their child’s care. Family caregiver involvement in care and good communication from PED staff are key elements in improving overall patient experience and satisfaction.
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spelling pubmed-106649252023-11-22 Family caregivers’ emotional and communication needs in Canadian pediatric emergency departments Ali, Samina Maki, Claudia Rahimi, Asa Ma, Keon Yaskina, Maryna Wong, Helen Stang, Antonia Principi, Tania Poonai, Naveen Gouin, Serge Froese R. N., Sylvia Clerc, Paul Carciumaru, Redjana Alqurashi, Waleed Rajagopal, Manasi Kammerer, Elise Leung, Julie Wright, Bruce Scott, Shannon D. PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVES: To describe the extent to which caregivers’ emotional and communication needs were met during pediatric emergency department (PED) visits. Secondary objectives included describing the association of caregiver emotional needs, satisfaction with care, and comfort in caring for their child’s illness at the time of discharge with demographic characteristics, caregiver experiences, and ED visit details. STUDY DESIGN: Electronic surveys with medical record review were deployed at ten Canadian PEDs from October 2018 –March 2020. A convenience sample of families with children <18 years presenting to a PED were enrolled, for one week every three months, for one year per site. Caregivers completed one in-PED survey and a follow-up survey, up to seven days post-visit. RESULTS: This study recruited 2005 caregivers who self-identified as mothers (74.3%, 1462/1969); mean age was 37.8 years (SD 7.7). 71.7% (1081/1507) of caregivers felt their emotional needs were met. 86.4% (1293/1496) identified communication with the doctor as good/very good and 83.4% (1249/1498) with their child’s nurse. Caregiver involvement in their child’s care was reported as good/very good 85.6% (1271/1485) of the time. 81.8% (1074/1313) of caregivers felt comfortable in caring for their child at home at the time of discharge. Lower caregiver anxiety scores, caregiver involvement in their child’s care, satisfactory updates, and having questions adequately addressed positively impacted caregiver emotional needs and increased caregiver comfort in caring for their child’s illness at home. CONCLUSION: Approximately 30% of caregivers presenting to PEDs have unmet emotional needs, over 15% had unmet communication needs, and 15% felt inadequately involved in their child’s care. Family caregiver involvement in care and good communication from PED staff are key elements in improving overall patient experience and satisfaction. Public Library of Science 2023-11-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10664925/ /pubmed/37992020 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0294597 Text en © 2023 Ali et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ali, Samina
Maki, Claudia
Rahimi, Asa
Ma, Keon
Yaskina, Maryna
Wong, Helen
Stang, Antonia
Principi, Tania
Poonai, Naveen
Gouin, Serge
Froese R. N., Sylvia
Clerc, Paul
Carciumaru, Redjana
Alqurashi, Waleed
Rajagopal, Manasi
Kammerer, Elise
Leung, Julie
Wright, Bruce
Scott, Shannon D.
Family caregivers’ emotional and communication needs in Canadian pediatric emergency departments
title Family caregivers’ emotional and communication needs in Canadian pediatric emergency departments
title_full Family caregivers’ emotional and communication needs in Canadian pediatric emergency departments
title_fullStr Family caregivers’ emotional and communication needs in Canadian pediatric emergency departments
title_full_unstemmed Family caregivers’ emotional and communication needs in Canadian pediatric emergency departments
title_short Family caregivers’ emotional and communication needs in Canadian pediatric emergency departments
title_sort family caregivers’ emotional and communication needs in canadian pediatric emergency departments
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10664925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37992020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0294597
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