NATURE OF GOOD-PARENT BELIEFS OF PARENTS OF CHILDREN SERVED BY A PEDIATRIC COMPLEX CARE PROGRAM

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

License

DOI

Type

dissertation

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Grantor

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Abstract

Good-parent beliefs, one’s idea of what it means to be a “good parent” to their child, function to help guide parental decision-making and facilitate coping in the context of pediatric illness. Among parents of children with advanced cancer and other complex illnesses, mixed-methods research has identified common themes across individuals’ good-parent beliefs. However, the good-parent beliefs of primary caregivers of children served by Complex Care Programs (CCPs) have not yet been explored. CCPs serve children with medical complexity (CMC), a distinct group of pediatric patients with multiple complex chronic medical illnesses and intensive medical involvement. Due to the chronicity and complexity of their conditions, parental medical decision-making for these children, and parent coping, are unique from other pediatric populations. This study aimed to describe the good-parent beliefs of primary caregivers of children served by CCPs and describe how these programs can best provide care in a way that aligns with parents’ good-parent beliefs. The current study included 15 primary caregivers of children served by a CCP at a large midwestern academic medical center. Qualitative interviews were conducted and analyzed using thematic analysis. All participants were able to describe their good-parent beliefs, and there were 16 good-parent beliefs identified in the sample. Good-parent beliefs were associated with medication- and surgery-related decision-making. They often provided direction to parents in managing their child’s complex needs, but they also served to incite rumination, identity challenges, and self-judgement for some. Despite not discussing good-parent beliefs directly with CCP staff, most participants felt that providers both understood their good-parent beliefs and acted in ways that helped parents to feel like a “good parent.” While many good-parent beliefs in the present study reflect those identified in other pediatric parent populations, current results suggest additional beliefs which have a focus on children’s growth and development, and on parent/caregiver well-being, as part of the role of being a “good parent” of CMC. Clinical implications are numerous for both pediatric medical and psychosocial providers, including the possibility of future development of population-specific psychotherapeutic interventions for caregivers. Future research is needed to elucidate the nature of good-parent beliefs more fully in this population, understand their functions, and guide clinicians to work most effectively with these families.

Description

Related Material and Data

Citation

Sponsorship

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By