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Text
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Citation List Month
October 2016 List
Dublin Core
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Title
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Perceptions Of The Pediatric Hospice Experience Among English- And Spanish-speaking Families
Publisher
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Journal Of Palliative Medicine
Date
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2016
Subject
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Adolescent; Adult; Attitude To Death/ethnology; Caregivers/psychology; Child; Child Preschool; Communication; Ethnic Groups/psychology; European Continental Ancestry; Group/psychology; Family/psychology; Female; Hispanic Americans/psychology; Hospice Care/psychology; Humans; Infant; Male; Middle Aged; Neoplasms/nursing; Neoplasms/psychology; Young Adult
Creator
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Thienprayoon R; Marks E; Funes M; Martinez-Puente LM; Winick N; Lee SC
Description
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OBJECTIVE:
Many children who die are eligible for hospice enrollment but little is known about parental perceptions of the hospice experience, the benefits, and disappointments. The objective of this study was to explore parental perspectives of the hospice experience in children with cancer, and to explore how race/ethnicity impacts this experience.
STUDY DESIGN:
We held 20 semistructured interviews with 34 caregivers of children who died of cancer and used hospice. Interviews were conducted in the caregivers' primary language: 12 in English and 8 in Spanish. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using accepted qualitative methods.
RESULTS:
Both English and Spanish speakers described the importance of honest, direct communication by medical providers, and anxieties surrounding the expectation of the moment of death. Five English-speaking families returned to the hospital because of unsatisfactory symptom management and the need for additional supportive services. Alternatively, Spanish speakers commonly stressed the importance of being at home and did not focus on symptom management. Both groups invoked themes of caregiver appraisal, but English-speaking caregivers more commonly discussed themes of financial hardship and fear of insurance loss, while Spanish-speakers focused on difficulties of bedside caregiving and geographic separation from family.
CONCLUSIONS:
The intense grief associated with the loss of a child creates shared experiences, but Spanish- and English-speaking parents describe their hospice experiences in different ways. Additional studies in pediatric hospice care are warranted to improve the care we provide to children at the end of life.
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1089/jpm.2015.0137
Rights
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Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).
2016
Adolescent
Adult
Attitude To Death/ethnology
Caregivers/psychology
Child
Child Preschool
Communication
Ethnic Groups/psychology
European Continental Ancestry
Family/psychology
Female
Funes M
Group/psychology
Hispanic Americans/psychology
Hospice Care/psychology
Humans
Infant
Journal of Palliative Medicine
Lee SC
Male
Marks E
Martinez-Puente LM
Middle Aged
Neoplasms/nursing
Neoplasms/psychology
October 2016 List
Thienprayoon R
Winick N
Young Adult