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Parents' Experiences Caring for a Child after a Critical Illness: A Qualitative Study.

Lenora M OlsonGrace N PerrySerena YangPatrick O'Roke GalyeanSusan L ZickmundSamuel SorensonNeethi P PintoAline B MadduxR Scott WatsonEricka L Fink
Published in: Journal of pediatric intensive care (2021)
Objectives  This article described parents' experience and identifies outcomes important to parents following their child's critical illness. Methods  Semistructured interviews with 22 female and 4 male parents representing 26 critically ill children with predominately neurologic and respiratory diagnoses. Most children were younger than 5 years at discharge with a median (interquartile range) of 2 (2.0-3.0) years from discharge to interview. Results  Many children returned home with life-altering physical and cognitive disabilities requiring months to years of rehabilitation. Parents remembered feeling unprepared and facing an intense, chaotic time when the child first returned home. They described how they suddenly had to center their daily activities around the child's needs amidst competing needs of siblings and partners, and in some cases, the medicalization of the home. They recounted negotiating adjustments almost daily with insurance agencies, medical doctors and therapists, employers, the child, and other family members to keep the family functioning. In the long term, families developed a new norm, choosing to focus on what the child could still do rather than what they could not. Even if the child returned to baseline, parents remembered the adjustments made to keep the child alive and the family functioning. Conclusion  Heightened awareness of family experiences after pediatric critical illness will allow health care providers to improve family preparedness for the transition from hospital to home.
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