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Published in: European Journal of Pediatrics 5/2018

Open Access 01-05-2018 | Original Article

Eliciting the experiences of the adolescent-parent dyad following critical care admission: a pilot study

Authors: Dora Wood, Sophie Geoghegan, Padmanabhan Ramnarayan, Peter J. Davis, John V. Pappachan, Sarah Goodwin, Jo Wray

Published in: European Journal of Pediatrics | Issue 5/2018

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Abstract

Critically ill adolescents are usually treated on intensive care units optimised for much older adults or younger children. The way they access and experience health services may be very different to most adolescent service users, and existing quality criteria may not apply to them. The objectives of this pilot study were, firstly, to determine whether adolescents and their families were able to articulate their experiences of their critical care admission and secondly, to identify the factors that are important to them during their intensive care unit (ICU) or high dependency unit (HDU) stay. Participants were 14–17 year olds who had previously had an emergency admission to an adult or paediatric ICU/HDU in one of four UK hospitals (two adult, two paediatric) and their parents. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with eight mother-adolescent dyads and one mother. Interviews were transcribed and analysed using framework analysis.
Conclusion: The main reported determinant of high-quality care was the quality of interaction with staff. The significance of these interactions and their environment depended on adolescents’ awareness of their surroundings, which was often limited in ICU and changed significantly over the course of their illness. Qualitative interview methodology would be difficult to scale up for this group.
What is known
Critically ill adolescents are usually treated on intensive care units optimised for older adults or younger children.
The way they access and experience health services may be different to most adolescent patients; existing quality criteria may not apply.
What is new
Reported determinants of high-quality care were age-appropriateness of the environment, respectfulness and friendliness of staff, communication and inclusion in healthcare decisions.
The significance of these depended on adolescents’ awareness of their surroundings, which was often limited and changed over the course of their illness.
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Metadata
Title
Eliciting the experiences of the adolescent-parent dyad following critical care admission: a pilot study
Authors
Dora Wood
Sophie Geoghegan
Padmanabhan Ramnarayan
Peter J. Davis
John V. Pappachan
Sarah Goodwin
Jo Wray
Publication date
01-05-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Pediatrics / Issue 5/2018
Print ISSN: 0340-6199
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1076
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-018-3117-y

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