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P-10 How do the prognostic perceptions of parents, and its concordance with those of HCPs, influence decisions about goals of care in children with life-limiting illnesses?

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P-10 How do the prognostic perceptions of parents, and its concordance with those of HCPs, influence decisions about goals of care in children with life-limiting illnesses? / Tahsin, Yasmin; Varey, Sandra; Gadoud, Amy.
In: BMJ Supportive and Palliative Care, Vol. 12, No. Suppl 2, 01.03.2022, p. A12-A12.

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@article{398fe037ded542ea9b28e564fa03c6ae,
title = "P-10 How do the prognostic perceptions of parents, and its concordance with those of HCPs, influence decisions about goals of care in children with life-limiting illnesses?",
abstract = "Background The prevalence of children with life-limiting conditions is set to increase, resulting in an increased number of parents being involved in their child{\textquoteright}s treatment decisions. These decisions are influenced by the medical information conveyed and their own evaluations of this knowledge. The aim of this review was to explore the alignment between parental and Healthcare professional (HCP) prognostic perceptions and treatment preferences, whilst presenting possible explanations for any differing opinions.Methods A literature search, using the databases: Medline, Trip, PubMed, PsychINFO and EMBASE was conducted. The inclusion criterion applied was textendash published since 2000, written in English, focused on children of 0textendash18 years. Peer reviewed data on the prognostic perceptions of parents and HCPs, and their goals of treatment for children with life limiting condition were selected.Results Overall, in the eleven papers included there was a lack of parental prognostic understanding with a poor alignment to the prognostic views of HCPs. Parents promoted more aggressive treatment options relative to HCPs more palliative approach. This is hypothesised to result from particularly fathers remaining hopeful for a cure. Studies showed discrepancies remained after prognostic conversations were held between parent{\textquoteright}s and HCPs, with others indicating parents{\textquoteright} insight of there being no cure resulted before being openly disclosed by a HCP.Conclusions This study postulates poor prognostic insight may arise from a lack of open communication, resulting in parents advocating for more aggressive treatment with hope of finding a cure. However, given the cross-sectional nature of the studies, this review is only able to suggest these correlations. Future studies are recommended to explore the trajectory of parental prognostic understanding and how it is influenced by communication with HCPs.",
author = "Yasmin Tahsin and Sandra Varey and Amy Gadoud",
year = "2022",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1136/spcare-2022-SCPSC.31",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "A12--A12",
journal = "BMJ Supportive and Palliative Care",
issn = "2045-435X",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group Ltd",
number = "Suppl 2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - P-10 How do the prognostic perceptions of parents, and its concordance with those of HCPs, influence decisions about goals of care in children with life-limiting illnesses?

AU - Tahsin, Yasmin

AU - Varey, Sandra

AU - Gadoud, Amy

PY - 2022/3/1

Y1 - 2022/3/1

N2 - Background The prevalence of children with life-limiting conditions is set to increase, resulting in an increased number of parents being involved in their child’s treatment decisions. These decisions are influenced by the medical information conveyed and their own evaluations of this knowledge. The aim of this review was to explore the alignment between parental and Healthcare professional (HCP) prognostic perceptions and treatment preferences, whilst presenting possible explanations for any differing opinions.Methods A literature search, using the databases: Medline, Trip, PubMed, PsychINFO and EMBASE was conducted. The inclusion criterion applied was textendash published since 2000, written in English, focused on children of 0textendash18 years. Peer reviewed data on the prognostic perceptions of parents and HCPs, and their goals of treatment for children with life limiting condition were selected.Results Overall, in the eleven papers included there was a lack of parental prognostic understanding with a poor alignment to the prognostic views of HCPs. Parents promoted more aggressive treatment options relative to HCPs more palliative approach. This is hypothesised to result from particularly fathers remaining hopeful for a cure. Studies showed discrepancies remained after prognostic conversations were held between parent’s and HCPs, with others indicating parents’ insight of there being no cure resulted before being openly disclosed by a HCP.Conclusions This study postulates poor prognostic insight may arise from a lack of open communication, resulting in parents advocating for more aggressive treatment with hope of finding a cure. However, given the cross-sectional nature of the studies, this review is only able to suggest these correlations. Future studies are recommended to explore the trajectory of parental prognostic understanding and how it is influenced by communication with HCPs.

AB - Background The prevalence of children with life-limiting conditions is set to increase, resulting in an increased number of parents being involved in their child’s treatment decisions. These decisions are influenced by the medical information conveyed and their own evaluations of this knowledge. The aim of this review was to explore the alignment between parental and Healthcare professional (HCP) prognostic perceptions and treatment preferences, whilst presenting possible explanations for any differing opinions.Methods A literature search, using the databases: Medline, Trip, PubMed, PsychINFO and EMBASE was conducted. The inclusion criterion applied was textendash published since 2000, written in English, focused on children of 0textendash18 years. Peer reviewed data on the prognostic perceptions of parents and HCPs, and their goals of treatment for children with life limiting condition were selected.Results Overall, in the eleven papers included there was a lack of parental prognostic understanding with a poor alignment to the prognostic views of HCPs. Parents promoted more aggressive treatment options relative to HCPs more palliative approach. This is hypothesised to result from particularly fathers remaining hopeful for a cure. Studies showed discrepancies remained after prognostic conversations were held between parent’s and HCPs, with others indicating parents’ insight of there being no cure resulted before being openly disclosed by a HCP.Conclusions This study postulates poor prognostic insight may arise from a lack of open communication, resulting in parents advocating for more aggressive treatment with hope of finding a cure. However, given the cross-sectional nature of the studies, this review is only able to suggest these correlations. Future studies are recommended to explore the trajectory of parental prognostic understanding and how it is influenced by communication with HCPs.

U2 - 10.1136/spcare-2022-SCPSC.31

DO - 10.1136/spcare-2022-SCPSC.31

M3 - Meeting abstract

VL - 12

SP - A12-A12

JO - BMJ Supportive and Palliative Care

JF - BMJ Supportive and Palliative Care

SN - 2045-435X

IS - Suppl 2

ER -