I feel like my house was taken away from me': Parents' experiences of having home adaptations for their medically complex, technology-dependent child

Title

I feel like my house was taken away from me': Parents' experiences of having home adaptations for their medically complex, technology-dependent child

Creator

Mitchell TK; Bray L; Blake L; Dickinson A; Carter B

Identifier

Publisher

Health and social care in the community

Date

2022

Subject

child; England; female; male; adult; human; Scotland; home care; Wales; patient care; article; controlled study; interview; preschool child; human experiment; wellbeing; conceptual framework; adolescent; thinking; decision making; father; mother; thematic analysis; heat; disabled person; chronic patient; biotechnology; regeneration

Description

Technology-dependent children are a sub-population of seriously ill children with life-limiting conditions who are being cared for at home by their families. Although home-based care has been the model of care for these children since the late 1980s, there is a paucity of literature about parents' experiences of having home adaptations made to enable their home to be a place of care for their child. Using the findings from auto-driven photo-elicitation interviews conducted between August 2017 and June 2018 with 12 parents (10 mothers and 2 fathers) who have a technology-dependent child (aged 5-25years) living in England, Scotland and Wales and David Seamon's five concepts of at-homeness (appropriation, at-easeness, regeneration, rootedness and warmth) as a conceptual framework, this paper addresses how parents' experienced home adaptations. Thematic analysis generated a meta-theme of 'Home needs to be a home for all family members' and the three key themes: (1) 'You just get told' and 'you're not involved'; (2) It's just the 'cheapest', 'quickest', 'short-term' approach; (3) Having 'control' and 'thinking things through.' The need to involve parents in decision-making about adaptations that are made to their home (family-informed design) is clear, not only from a cost-saving perspective for the state, but for creating an aesthetic and functional home that optimises health, well-being and feelings of at-homeness for the entire family. Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Health and Social Care in the Community published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Rights

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Citation List Month

August 2022 List

Collection

Citation

Mitchell TK; Bray L; Blake L; Dickinson A; Carter B, “I feel like my house was taken away from me': Parents' experiences of having home adaptations for their medically complex, technology-dependent child,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 26, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/18184.