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Understanding the needs of professionals who provide psychosocial care for children and adults with disorders of sex development

OBJECTIVE: Disorders in sex development (DSD) can be treated well medically, but families will encounter many psychosocial challenges. Promoting counselling to facilitate acceptance and coping is important yet equality of access is unknown. This study investigated the modalities of psychosocial care...

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Autores principales: Dessens, Arianne, Guaragna-Filho, Guilherme, Kyriakou, Andreas, Bryce, Jillian, Sanders, Caroline, Nordenskjöld, Agneta, Rozas, Marta, Iotova, Violeta, Ediati, Annastasia, Juul, Anders, Krawczynski, Maciej, Hiort, Olaf, Faisal Ahmed, S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5843008/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29637150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjpo-2017-000132
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author Dessens, Arianne
Guaragna-Filho, Guilherme
Kyriakou, Andreas
Bryce, Jillian
Sanders, Caroline
Nordenskjöld, Agneta
Rozas, Marta
Iotova, Violeta
Ediati, Annastasia
Juul, Anders
Krawczynski, Maciej
Hiort, Olaf
Faisal Ahmed, S
author_facet Dessens, Arianne
Guaragna-Filho, Guilherme
Kyriakou, Andreas
Bryce, Jillian
Sanders, Caroline
Nordenskjöld, Agneta
Rozas, Marta
Iotova, Violeta
Ediati, Annastasia
Juul, Anders
Krawczynski, Maciej
Hiort, Olaf
Faisal Ahmed, S
author_sort Dessens, Arianne
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Disorders in sex development (DSD) can be treated well medically, but families will encounter many psychosocial challenges. Promoting counselling to facilitate acceptance and coping is important yet equality of access is unknown. This study investigated the modalities of psychosocial care provided in centres of DSD care. METHODS: An international survey conducted among 93 providers of psychosocial care, identified through clinical networks, registries and professional forums. RESULTS: Forty-six respondents from 22 different countries filled out the survey (49%). Most respondents (78%) were based in hospital-based expert teams. Referrals came from paediatric endocrinologists (76%), gynaecologists (39%) and paediatric urologists (37%). Psychological counselling was most frequently given to parents (74%), followed by children (39%), adolescents (37%) and adults (11%) and was most frequently focused on coping and acceptance of DSD (54%), education (52%), the atypical body (39%) and genital (41%), decisions on genital surgery (33%), complications with sexual intercourse (29%), disclosure (28%) and acceptance of infertility (11%). Respondents most frequently observed DSD related confusion about gender (54%), acceptance of cross gender behaviour (50%), anxiety (43%) and sadness and depression (38%). CONCLUSIONS: Most psychosocial care is provided to parents. It is assumed that parental support is important as acceptance is conditional to become affectionate caretakers. Although it may be more difficult for youngsters to communicate about their condition and treatment, providing opportunity to bring up issues that are important for them, is imperative. Clinicians and parents should be aware that parental and patients’ interests may not correspond completely. Psychosocial management should also include transition and adult care.
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spelling pubmed-58430082018-04-10 Understanding the needs of professionals who provide psychosocial care for children and adults with disorders of sex development Dessens, Arianne Guaragna-Filho, Guilherme Kyriakou, Andreas Bryce, Jillian Sanders, Caroline Nordenskjöld, Agneta Rozas, Marta Iotova, Violeta Ediati, Annastasia Juul, Anders Krawczynski, Maciej Hiort, Olaf Faisal Ahmed, S BMJ Paediatr Open Original Article OBJECTIVE: Disorders in sex development (DSD) can be treated well medically, but families will encounter many psychosocial challenges. Promoting counselling to facilitate acceptance and coping is important yet equality of access is unknown. This study investigated the modalities of psychosocial care provided in centres of DSD care. METHODS: An international survey conducted among 93 providers of psychosocial care, identified through clinical networks, registries and professional forums. RESULTS: Forty-six respondents from 22 different countries filled out the survey (49%). Most respondents (78%) were based in hospital-based expert teams. Referrals came from paediatric endocrinologists (76%), gynaecologists (39%) and paediatric urologists (37%). Psychological counselling was most frequently given to parents (74%), followed by children (39%), adolescents (37%) and adults (11%) and was most frequently focused on coping and acceptance of DSD (54%), education (52%), the atypical body (39%) and genital (41%), decisions on genital surgery (33%), complications with sexual intercourse (29%), disclosure (28%) and acceptance of infertility (11%). Respondents most frequently observed DSD related confusion about gender (54%), acceptance of cross gender behaviour (50%), anxiety (43%) and sadness and depression (38%). CONCLUSIONS: Most psychosocial care is provided to parents. It is assumed that parental support is important as acceptance is conditional to become affectionate caretakers. Although it may be more difficult for youngsters to communicate about their condition and treatment, providing opportunity to bring up issues that are important for them, is imperative. Clinicians and parents should be aware that parental and patients’ interests may not correspond completely. Psychosocial management should also include transition and adult care. BMJ Publishing Group 2017-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC5843008/ /pubmed/29637150 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjpo-2017-000132 Text en © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted. This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
spellingShingle Original Article
Dessens, Arianne
Guaragna-Filho, Guilherme
Kyriakou, Andreas
Bryce, Jillian
Sanders, Caroline
Nordenskjöld, Agneta
Rozas, Marta
Iotova, Violeta
Ediati, Annastasia
Juul, Anders
Krawczynski, Maciej
Hiort, Olaf
Faisal Ahmed, S
Understanding the needs of professionals who provide psychosocial care for children and adults with disorders of sex development
title Understanding the needs of professionals who provide psychosocial care for children and adults with disorders of sex development
title_full Understanding the needs of professionals who provide psychosocial care for children and adults with disorders of sex development
title_fullStr Understanding the needs of professionals who provide psychosocial care for children and adults with disorders of sex development
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the needs of professionals who provide psychosocial care for children and adults with disorders of sex development
title_short Understanding the needs of professionals who provide psychosocial care for children and adults with disorders of sex development
title_sort understanding the needs of professionals who provide psychosocial care for children and adults with disorders of sex development
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5843008/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29637150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjpo-2017-000132
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