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Management of Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths in the Emergency Department:: A Family-Centered Care Protocol

OBJECTIVE: To establish a standardized, trauma informed and family-centered emergency department (ED) sudden and unexpected infant death (SUID) management protocol at Nemours Children’s Health, Delaware for medical professionals and multidisciplinary team (MDT) collaborators, informed by national cl...

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Autores principales: Deutsch, Stephanie Anne, Macaulay, Jennifer L., Smith, Nadine, De Jong, Allan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Delaware Academy of Medicine / Delaware Public Health Association 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9162392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35692998
http://dx.doi.org/10.32481/djph.2022.05.003
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author Deutsch, Stephanie Anne
Macaulay, Jennifer L.
Smith, Nadine
De Jong, Allan
author_facet Deutsch, Stephanie Anne
Macaulay, Jennifer L.
Smith, Nadine
De Jong, Allan
author_sort Deutsch, Stephanie Anne
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To establish a standardized, trauma informed and family-centered emergency department (ED) sudden and unexpected infant death (SUID) management protocol at Nemours Children’s Health, Delaware for medical professionals and multidisciplinary team (MDT) collaborators, informed by national clinical practice guidance, and respective of both family and investigative needs. SUID are emotionally distressing for involved family members, often precipitated by profound grief and confusion as the family interacts with many mandated public agencies during the course of a medicolegal death investigation. Although SUID necessitates consideration of child abuse and neglect as a contributory factor, and accurate determination of death cause may have critical implications for other family members and public health, prioritizing family needs in a trauma informed manner is paramount. Collaboration between MDT partners to provide optimal care to families following SUID involves transparent family communication, attending to medical and mental health needs of surviving family (especially siblings), and respecting medicolegal investigative constraints. Many institutions lack standardized approaches to SUID cases, which may precipitate increased family distress and delay initiation of necessary medicolegal death procedures. METHODS: An MDT expert panel consisting of medical, legal, law enforcement, and child welfare professionals was convened at Nemours Children’s Health, Delaware in 2018 over a 3-month period to analyze and implement an enhanced, family-centered, trauma informed hospital protocol. RESULTS: Using exploratory inquiry and dialogue to elicit important protocol goals, a family-centered protocol with revised, coordinated roles for MDT members was developed with enhanced focus on communication, family-, and team-oriented care. CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of a family-centered, ED-based protocol standardizing the approach to SUID effectively supports medicolegal death investigative procedures while prioritizing trauma informed, supportive, sensitive ED care for grieving families. POLICY IMPLICATIONS: Health care institutions serving children and their families should develop and implement trauma informed, family-centered protocols to ensure sensitivity during medicolegal death investigations.
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spelling pubmed-91623922022-06-09 Management of Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths in the Emergency Department:: A Family-Centered Care Protocol Deutsch, Stephanie Anne Macaulay, Jennifer L. Smith, Nadine De Jong, Allan Dela J Public Health Article OBJECTIVE: To establish a standardized, trauma informed and family-centered emergency department (ED) sudden and unexpected infant death (SUID) management protocol at Nemours Children’s Health, Delaware for medical professionals and multidisciplinary team (MDT) collaborators, informed by national clinical practice guidance, and respective of both family and investigative needs. SUID are emotionally distressing for involved family members, often precipitated by profound grief and confusion as the family interacts with many mandated public agencies during the course of a medicolegal death investigation. Although SUID necessitates consideration of child abuse and neglect as a contributory factor, and accurate determination of death cause may have critical implications for other family members and public health, prioritizing family needs in a trauma informed manner is paramount. Collaboration between MDT partners to provide optimal care to families following SUID involves transparent family communication, attending to medical and mental health needs of surviving family (especially siblings), and respecting medicolegal investigative constraints. Many institutions lack standardized approaches to SUID cases, which may precipitate increased family distress and delay initiation of necessary medicolegal death procedures. METHODS: An MDT expert panel consisting of medical, legal, law enforcement, and child welfare professionals was convened at Nemours Children’s Health, Delaware in 2018 over a 3-month period to analyze and implement an enhanced, family-centered, trauma informed hospital protocol. RESULTS: Using exploratory inquiry and dialogue to elicit important protocol goals, a family-centered protocol with revised, coordinated roles for MDT members was developed with enhanced focus on communication, family-, and team-oriented care. CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of a family-centered, ED-based protocol standardizing the approach to SUID effectively supports medicolegal death investigative procedures while prioritizing trauma informed, supportive, sensitive ED care for grieving families. POLICY IMPLICATIONS: Health care institutions serving children and their families should develop and implement trauma informed, family-centered protocols to ensure sensitivity during medicolegal death investigations. Delaware Academy of Medicine / Delaware Public Health Association 2022-05-31 /pmc/articles/PMC9162392/ /pubmed/35692998 http://dx.doi.org/10.32481/djph.2022.05.003 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/The journal and its content is copyrighted by the Delaware Academy of Medicine / Delaware Public Health Association (Academy/DPHA). This DJPH site, its contents, and its metadata are licensed under Creative Commons License - CC BY-NC-ND. (Please click to read (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) common-language details on this license type, or copy and paste the following into your web browser: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). Images are NOT covered under the Creative Commons license and are the property of the original photographer or company who supplied the image. Opinions expressed by authors of articles summarized, quoted, or published in full within the DJPH represent only the opinions of those authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy of the Academy/DPHA or the institution with which the authors are affiliated.
spellingShingle Article
Deutsch, Stephanie Anne
Macaulay, Jennifer L.
Smith, Nadine
De Jong, Allan
Management of Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths in the Emergency Department:: A Family-Centered Care Protocol
title Management of Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths in the Emergency Department:: A Family-Centered Care Protocol
title_full Management of Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths in the Emergency Department:: A Family-Centered Care Protocol
title_fullStr Management of Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths in the Emergency Department:: A Family-Centered Care Protocol
title_full_unstemmed Management of Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths in the Emergency Department:: A Family-Centered Care Protocol
title_short Management of Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths in the Emergency Department:: A Family-Centered Care Protocol
title_sort management of sudden unexpected infant deaths in the emergency department:: a family-centered care protocol
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9162392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35692998
http://dx.doi.org/10.32481/djph.2022.05.003
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