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Bereaved parents' intentions and suggestions about research autopsies in children with lethal brain tumors

Authors :
Nancy West
Pamela S. Hinds
Jennifer A. Windham
Poorna Gajjar
Belinda N. Mandrell
Teresa Hammarback
Justin N. Baker
Alberto Broniscer
Jami S. Gattuso
Source :
The Journal of pediatrics. 163(2)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Objective To determine bereaved parents' perceptions about participating in autopsy-related research and to elucidate their suggestions about how to improve the process. Study design A prospective multicenter study was conducted to collect tumor tissue by autopsy of children with diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma. In the study, parents completed a questionnaire after their child's death to describe the purpose for, hopes (ie, desired outcomes of), and regrets about their participation in autopsy-related research. Parents also suggested ways to improve autopsy-related discussions. A semantic content analytic method was used to analyze responses and identify themes within and across parent responses. Results Responses from 33 parents indicated that the main reasons for participating in this study were to advance medical knowledge or find a cure, a desire to help others, and choosing as their child would want. Parents hoped that participation would help others or help find a cure as well as provide closure. Providing education/anticipatory guidance and having a trusted professional sensitively broach the topic of autopsy were suggestions to improve autopsy discussions. All parents felt that study participation was the right decision, and none regretted it; 91% agreed that they would make the choice again. Conclusion Because autopsy can help advance scientific understanding of the disease itself and because parents reported having no regret and even cited benefits, researchers should be encouraged to continue autopsy-related research. Parental perceptions about such studies should be evaluated in other types of pediatric diseases.

Details

ISSN :
10976833
Volume :
163
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3a23db9097c36ec83fe0d9a6fda316f9