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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Research Protocols

Date Submitted: Nov 4, 2022
Date Accepted: Jan 23, 2023
Date Submitted to PubMed: Jan 24, 2023

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Parent Experiences of Child Loss and End-of-Life Care in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit: Protocol for a Qualitative Study

Alcón Nájera S, González Gil MT

Parent Experiences of Child Loss and End-of-Life Care in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit: Protocol for a Qualitative Study

JMIR Res Protoc 2023;12:e43756

DOI: 10.2196/43756

PMID: 36693628

PMCID: 10131923

PARENT EXPERIENCES OF CHILD LOSS AND END-OF-LIFE-CARE IN A PAEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT: A QUALITATIVE STUDY PROTOCOL

  • Sara Alcón Nájera; 
  • Maria Teresa González Gil

ABSTRACT

Background:

Death of a child in the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit is thankfully a rare event that can occur after failed cardiopulmonary resuscitation efforts, after a brain death diagnosis, or after a decision to limit therapeutic efforts. Nevertheless, even in the case of children with terminal and progressive illnesses, death is a crisis that comes as a surprise to parents and is perceived as unexpected. In the final stage of a child’s life, healthcare staff play a key role in sharing feelings and experiences with the family and in supporting them throughout the process in order to facilitate the grieving process.

Objective:

To explore the experiences of parents whose children have died in a Paediatric Intensive Care Unit.

Methods:

Design: Qualitative phenomenological study based on van Manen’s proposal.

Methods:

The study will be conducted in the paediatric intensive care unit of a tertiary care hospital. The study population will be parents or guardians over 18 years of age of children who have died in the unit at least 6 months prior to potential participation in the study. Purposive sampling will be used to ensure sample diversity in relation to experiential variables. Families will be initially contacted by letter sent alongside the standard letter of condolences from the hospital, and then recruited in a subsequent telephone call. The sample size will be determined by data saturation. In-depth interviews will be conducted individually or in pairs. Parents will decide when, how, and where to conduct the interviews, which will be transcribed verbatim and examined using thematic discourse analysis.

Results:

This study received a grant in January 2021 and gained permission from the Medical and Health Research Ethics Committee of Gregorio Marañón Hospital and Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain, on 2021. Data collection started on February, 2021, and the results are expected to be published in 2023.

Conclusions:

This project is intended to maintain, strengthen, and build on a particular line of research on end-of-life care with a focus on effective coping, spiritual wellbeing, and the adaptive grieving process. The results will contribute to establishing action guidelines that are both based on the discourses of parents who have experienced the death of a child and geared towards high quality end-of-life care through dignified death and adaptive grief management. Clinical Trial: -


 Citation

Please cite as:

Alcón Nájera S, González Gil MT

Parent Experiences of Child Loss and End-of-Life Care in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit: Protocol for a Qualitative Study

JMIR Res Protoc 2023;12:e43756

DOI: 10.2196/43756

PMID: 36693628

PMCID: 10131923

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