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Planning ahead with children with life-limiting conditions and their families: development, implementation and evaluation of ‘My Choices’

BACKGROUND: The United Kingdom has led the world in the development of children’s palliative care. Over the past two decades, the illness trajectories of children with life-limiting conditions have extended with new treatments and better home-based care. Future planning is a critically under-researc...

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Autores principales: Noyes, Jane, Hastings, Richard P, Lewis, Mary, Hain, Richard, Bennett, Virginia, Hobson, Lucie, Spencer, Llinos Haf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3579717/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23384400
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-684X-12-5
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author Noyes, Jane
Hastings, Richard P
Lewis, Mary
Hain, Richard
Bennett, Virginia
Hobson, Lucie
Spencer, Llinos Haf
author_facet Noyes, Jane
Hastings, Richard P
Lewis, Mary
Hain, Richard
Bennett, Virginia
Hobson, Lucie
Spencer, Llinos Haf
author_sort Noyes, Jane
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The United Kingdom has led the world in the development of children’s palliative care. Over the past two decades, the illness trajectories of children with life-limiting conditions have extended with new treatments and better home-based care. Future planning is a critically under-researched aspect of children’s palliative care globally. This paper describes the development, implementation and evaluation of innovative child and parent-held palliative care planning resources. The resources were designed to facilitate parent and child thinking and engagement in future planning, and to determine care preferences and preferred locations of care for children with life-limiting conditions from diagnosis onwards. These resources fill a significant gap in palliative care planning before the end-of-life phase. METHODS: Drawing on contemporaneous research on producing evidence-based children’s health information, we collaborated with leading children’s not-for-profit organisations, parents, children, and professionals. A set of resources (My Choices booklets) were developed for parents and children and evaluated using interviews (parents, children, professionals) and questionnaires (professionals) and an open web-based consultation. RESULTS: Parents and children responded in three ways: Some used the booklets to produce detailed written plans with clear outcomes and ideas about how best to achieve desired outcomes. Others preferred to use the booklet to help them think about potential options. Remaining parents found it difficult to think about the future and felt there was no point because they perceived there to be no suitable local services. Professionals varied in confidence in their ability to engage with families to plan ahead and identified many challenges that prevented them from doing so. Few families shared their plans with professionals. Parents and children have far stronger preferences for home-care than professionals. CONCLUSION: The My Choices booklets were revised in light of findings, have been endorsed by Together for Short Lives, and are free to download in English and Welsh for use by parents and young people globally. More work needs to be done to support families who are not yet receptive to planning ahead. Professionals would benefit from more training in person-centred approaches to future planning and additional communications skills to increase confidence and ability to engage with families to deliver sensitive palliative care planning.
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spelling pubmed-35797172013-02-23 Planning ahead with children with life-limiting conditions and their families: development, implementation and evaluation of ‘My Choices’ Noyes, Jane Hastings, Richard P Lewis, Mary Hain, Richard Bennett, Virginia Hobson, Lucie Spencer, Llinos Haf BMC Palliat Care Research Article BACKGROUND: The United Kingdom has led the world in the development of children’s palliative care. Over the past two decades, the illness trajectories of children with life-limiting conditions have extended with new treatments and better home-based care. Future planning is a critically under-researched aspect of children’s palliative care globally. This paper describes the development, implementation and evaluation of innovative child and parent-held palliative care planning resources. The resources were designed to facilitate parent and child thinking and engagement in future planning, and to determine care preferences and preferred locations of care for children with life-limiting conditions from diagnosis onwards. These resources fill a significant gap in palliative care planning before the end-of-life phase. METHODS: Drawing on contemporaneous research on producing evidence-based children’s health information, we collaborated with leading children’s not-for-profit organisations, parents, children, and professionals. A set of resources (My Choices booklets) were developed for parents and children and evaluated using interviews (parents, children, professionals) and questionnaires (professionals) and an open web-based consultation. RESULTS: Parents and children responded in three ways: Some used the booklets to produce detailed written plans with clear outcomes and ideas about how best to achieve desired outcomes. Others preferred to use the booklet to help them think about potential options. Remaining parents found it difficult to think about the future and felt there was no point because they perceived there to be no suitable local services. Professionals varied in confidence in their ability to engage with families to plan ahead and identified many challenges that prevented them from doing so. Few families shared their plans with professionals. Parents and children have far stronger preferences for home-care than professionals. CONCLUSION: The My Choices booklets were revised in light of findings, have been endorsed by Together for Short Lives, and are free to download in English and Welsh for use by parents and young people globally. More work needs to be done to support families who are not yet receptive to planning ahead. Professionals would benefit from more training in person-centred approaches to future planning and additional communications skills to increase confidence and ability to engage with families to deliver sensitive palliative care planning. BioMed Central 2013-02-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3579717/ /pubmed/23384400 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-684X-12-5 Text en Copyright ©2013 Noyes et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Noyes, Jane
Hastings, Richard P
Lewis, Mary
Hain, Richard
Bennett, Virginia
Hobson, Lucie
Spencer, Llinos Haf
Planning ahead with children with life-limiting conditions and their families: development, implementation and evaluation of ‘My Choices’
title Planning ahead with children with life-limiting conditions and their families: development, implementation and evaluation of ‘My Choices’
title_full Planning ahead with children with life-limiting conditions and their families: development, implementation and evaluation of ‘My Choices’
title_fullStr Planning ahead with children with life-limiting conditions and their families: development, implementation and evaluation of ‘My Choices’
title_full_unstemmed Planning ahead with children with life-limiting conditions and their families: development, implementation and evaluation of ‘My Choices’
title_short Planning ahead with children with life-limiting conditions and their families: development, implementation and evaluation of ‘My Choices’
title_sort planning ahead with children with life-limiting conditions and their families: development, implementation and evaluation of ‘my choices’
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3579717/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23384400
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-684X-12-5
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