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Perceptions of the parents of deceased children and of healthcare providers about end-of-life communication and breaking bad news at a tertiary care public hospital in India: A qualitative exploratory study

BACKGROUND: Parents of dying children face unique challenge and expect compassionate support from health care providers (HCPs). This study explored the experiences of the parents and HCPs about the end-of-life care and breaking bad news and related positive and negative factors in Indian context. ME...

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Autores principales: Das, Manoja Kumar, Arora, Narendra Kumar, Chellani, Harish Kumar, Debata, Pradeep Kumar, Meena, K. R., Rasaily, Reeta, Kaur, Gurkirat, Malik, Prikanksha, Joshi, Shipra, Kumari, Manisha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7971872/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33735296
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248661
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author Das, Manoja Kumar
Arora, Narendra Kumar
Chellani, Harish Kumar
Debata, Pradeep Kumar
Meena, K. R.
Rasaily, Reeta
Kaur, Gurkirat
Malik, Prikanksha
Joshi, Shipra
Kumari, Manisha
author_facet Das, Manoja Kumar
Arora, Narendra Kumar
Chellani, Harish Kumar
Debata, Pradeep Kumar
Meena, K. R.
Rasaily, Reeta
Kaur, Gurkirat
Malik, Prikanksha
Joshi, Shipra
Kumari, Manisha
author_sort Das, Manoja Kumar
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Parents of dying children face unique challenge and expect compassionate support from health care providers (HCPs). This study explored the experiences of the parents and HCPs about the end-of-life care and breaking bad news and related positive and negative factors in Indian context. METHODS: This qualitative exploratory study was conducted at paediatrics department of a tertiary care hospital in Delhi. In-depth interviews with the parents (n = 49) and family members (n = 21) of the children died at the hospital and HCPs (6 doctors, 6 nurses and 4 support staffs) were conducted. Also events and communication around death of eight children were observed. Data were inductively analysed using thematic content analysis method to identify emerging themes and codes. RESULTS: Doctors were the lead communicators. Majority of parents perceived the attitude, communication and language used as by resident doctors as brief, insensitive and sometimes inappropriate or negative. They perceived that the attitude and communication by senior doctor’s as empathetic, positive and complete. Parents recalled the death declaration by resident doctors as non-empathetic, blunt and cold. Most parents received no emotional support from HCPs during and after death of their child. All doctors expressed that death of their patients affected them and their emotions, which they coped through different activities. The overcrowded wards, high workload, infrastructural limitation and no formal communication training added to the emotional stress of the HCPs. CONCLUSIONS: Majority of the communication by the HCPs during the hospitalisation and end-of-life period were perceived as suboptimal by the parents. The HCPs were emotionally affected and faced end-of-life communication challenges. The study highlights the communication by HCPs and support for parents during the end-of-life communication and breaking bad news. It suggests adoption of context specific communication protocol and materials and training of HCPs in communication to improve the quality of care.
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spelling pubmed-79718722021-03-31 Perceptions of the parents of deceased children and of healthcare providers about end-of-life communication and breaking bad news at a tertiary care public hospital in India: A qualitative exploratory study Das, Manoja Kumar Arora, Narendra Kumar Chellani, Harish Kumar Debata, Pradeep Kumar Meena, K. R. Rasaily, Reeta Kaur, Gurkirat Malik, Prikanksha Joshi, Shipra Kumari, Manisha PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Parents of dying children face unique challenge and expect compassionate support from health care providers (HCPs). This study explored the experiences of the parents and HCPs about the end-of-life care and breaking bad news and related positive and negative factors in Indian context. METHODS: This qualitative exploratory study was conducted at paediatrics department of a tertiary care hospital in Delhi. In-depth interviews with the parents (n = 49) and family members (n = 21) of the children died at the hospital and HCPs (6 doctors, 6 nurses and 4 support staffs) were conducted. Also events and communication around death of eight children were observed. Data were inductively analysed using thematic content analysis method to identify emerging themes and codes. RESULTS: Doctors were the lead communicators. Majority of parents perceived the attitude, communication and language used as by resident doctors as brief, insensitive and sometimes inappropriate or negative. They perceived that the attitude and communication by senior doctor’s as empathetic, positive and complete. Parents recalled the death declaration by resident doctors as non-empathetic, blunt and cold. Most parents received no emotional support from HCPs during and after death of their child. All doctors expressed that death of their patients affected them and their emotions, which they coped through different activities. The overcrowded wards, high workload, infrastructural limitation and no formal communication training added to the emotional stress of the HCPs. CONCLUSIONS: Majority of the communication by the HCPs during the hospitalisation and end-of-life period were perceived as suboptimal by the parents. The HCPs were emotionally affected and faced end-of-life communication challenges. The study highlights the communication by HCPs and support for parents during the end-of-life communication and breaking bad news. It suggests adoption of context specific communication protocol and materials and training of HCPs in communication to improve the quality of care. Public Library of Science 2021-03-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7971872/ /pubmed/33735296 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248661 Text en © 2021 Das et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://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
Das, Manoja Kumar
Arora, Narendra Kumar
Chellani, Harish Kumar
Debata, Pradeep Kumar
Meena, K. R.
Rasaily, Reeta
Kaur, Gurkirat
Malik, Prikanksha
Joshi, Shipra
Kumari, Manisha
Perceptions of the parents of deceased children and of healthcare providers about end-of-life communication and breaking bad news at a tertiary care public hospital in India: A qualitative exploratory study
title Perceptions of the parents of deceased children and of healthcare providers about end-of-life communication and breaking bad news at a tertiary care public hospital in India: A qualitative exploratory study
title_full Perceptions of the parents of deceased children and of healthcare providers about end-of-life communication and breaking bad news at a tertiary care public hospital in India: A qualitative exploratory study
title_fullStr Perceptions of the parents of deceased children and of healthcare providers about end-of-life communication and breaking bad news at a tertiary care public hospital in India: A qualitative exploratory study
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions of the parents of deceased children and of healthcare providers about end-of-life communication and breaking bad news at a tertiary care public hospital in India: A qualitative exploratory study
title_short Perceptions of the parents of deceased children and of healthcare providers about end-of-life communication and breaking bad news at a tertiary care public hospital in India: A qualitative exploratory study
title_sort perceptions of the parents of deceased children and of healthcare providers about end-of-life communication and breaking bad news at a tertiary care public hospital in india: a qualitative exploratory study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7971872/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33735296
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248661
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