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Assume It Will Break: Parental Perspectives on Negative Communication Experiences in Pediatric Oncology.

Authors :
Sisk BA
Zavadil JA
Blazin LJ
Baker JN
Mack JW
DuBois JM
Source :
JCO oncology practice [JCO Oncol Pract] 2021 Jun; Vol. 17 (6), pp. e859-e871. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Apr 13.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose: Communication breakdowns in pediatric oncology can have negative consequences for patients and families. A detailed analysis of these negative encounters will support clinicians in anticipating and responding to communication breakdowns.<br />Methods: Semistructured interviews with 80 parents of children with cancer across three academic medical centers during treatment, survivorship, or bereavement. We analyzed transcripts using semantic content analysis.<br />Results: Nearly all parents identified negative communication experiences (n = 76). We identified four categories of contributors to negative experiences: individual (n = 68), team (n = 26), organization (n = 46), and greater health care system (n = 8). These experiences involved a variety of health care professionals across multiple specialties. Parents reported 12 personal consequences of communication breakdowns: emotional distress (n = 65), insufficient understanding (n = 48), decreased trust or confidence (n = 37), inconvenience (n = 36), medical harm (n = 23), decreased self-confidence (n = 17), decreased emotional support (n = 13), decreased engagement (n = 9), false hope (n = 9), decreased hope (n = 7), financial insult (n = 7), and decreased access to resources (n = 3). We identified five categories of supportive responses from clinicians: exploring (n = 8), acknowledging (n = 17), informing (n = 27), adapting (n = 27), and advocating (n = 18). Parents often increased their own advocacy on behalf of their child (n = 47). Parents also identified the need for parental engagement in finding solutions (n = 12). Finally, one parent suggested that clinicians should assume that communication will fail and develop contingency plans in advance.<br />Conclusion: Communication breakdowns in pediatric oncology negatively affect parents and children. Clinicians should plan for communication breakdowns and respond by exploring, acknowledging, informing, adapting, advocating, and engaging parents in finding solutions.<br />Competing Interests: James M. DuBoisConsulting or Advisory Role: Centene CorpNo other potential conflicts of interest were reported.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2688-1535
Volume :
17
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JCO oncology practice
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33848191
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1200/OP.20.01038