“It's Hard Not to Have Regrets:” Qualitative Analysis of Decisional Regret in Bereaved Parents

Title

“It's Hard Not to Have Regrets:” Qualitative Analysis of Decisional Regret in Bereaved Parents

Creator

Feifer D; Broden E; Baker JN; Wolfe J; Snaman J

Publisher

Journal of Pain and Symptom Management

Date

2023

Subject

Parents; child; Bereavement; pediatric cancer; parent; bereavement; decisional regret

Description

Context Bereaved parents may have heightened risk for decisional regret; however, little is known about regret early in bereavement. Objectives We characterized decisional regrets endorsed by parents of children who died from cancer within the first two years of their bereavement. Methods We analyzed responses from a cross-sectional, dual site study of parents 6 to 24 months from their child's death. Parents indicated whether they had regrets about decisions made at the end of their child's life (yes/no/I don't know) and elaborated with free text. We used content analysis to identify recurrent categories in parents’ responses. Results A total of 125 parents of 88 children completed the survey; 123 responded to the decisional regret item and 84 (63%) elaborated with free text. Forty-seven (38%) parents reported decisional regret(s), 61 (50%) indicated no regret(s), and 15 (12%) were unsure. Parental free-text responses related to 5 categories: treatments, including those pursued and/or not pursued (n=57), decision-making processes (n=35), relationships with their child and care team (n=26), child suffering (n=10), and end-of-life characteristics (n=6). The relative frequency of categories was similar in parents with and without decisional regret, but self-blame was more common in responses from parents with decisional regret. Conclusion Many bereaved parents endorse decisional regret in early bereavement. Treatments and decision-making processes were most cited among parents both with and without regret. Identifying factors associated with heightened parental risk of decisional regret using longitudinal study is an important focus of future research.

Rights

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Citation List Month

2023 SE3 - Oncology

Citation

Feifer D; Broden E; Baker JN; Wolfe J; Snaman J, ““It's Hard Not to Have Regrets:” Qualitative Analysis of Decisional Regret in Bereaved Parents,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 28, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/19400.