Objective To investigate parents ’ perspectives on the desirability, content, and conditions of a physician-parent conference after their child’s death in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Study design Audio-recorded telephone interviews were conducted with 56 parents of 48 children. All children died in the PICU of one of six children’s hospitals in the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network (CPCCRN) 3 to 12 months before the study. Results Only seven (13%) parents had a scheduled meeting with any physician to discuss their child’s death; 33 (59%) wanted to meet with their child’s intensive care physician. Of these, 27 (82%) were willing to return to the hospi...
BACKGROUND Parents facing the death of their child have a strong need for compassionate professio...
Hospitalization of a child in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) is extremely stressful for pa...
Context: approximately 25% of children diagnosed with cancer eventually die. Losing a child puts par...
of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network Objecti...
Objectives: Support from healthcare professionals in a PICU is highly valuable for parents of dying ...
Objective: To investigate the rationale and consequences associated with a parent's decision to disc...
Neonatal deaths account for 42% of inpatient pediatric deaths. Unfortunately, there is little eviden...
OBJECTIVE: To determine parent's views on how death of their children should have been handled. DES...
OBJECTIVE:To investigate the rationale and consequences associated with a parent's decision to discu...
Background: Parents who have experienced the death of a child from cancer have unique bereavement ne...
Objective: To evaluate the feasibility and perceived benefits of conducting physician-parent follow-...
A child’s death upends a family’s anticipated life cycle and embodied parental roles; resulting in a...
Background. The admission of an infant to the neonatal intensive care unit represents for many paren...
A child’s death upends a family’s anticipated life cycle and embodied parental roles; resulting in a...
Objective: The death of a child from cancer is an intense and life-changing loss for a parent. Guide...
BACKGROUND Parents facing the death of their child have a strong need for compassionate professio...
Hospitalization of a child in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) is extremely stressful for pa...
Context: approximately 25% of children diagnosed with cancer eventually die. Losing a child puts par...
of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network Objecti...
Objectives: Support from healthcare professionals in a PICU is highly valuable for parents of dying ...
Objective: To investigate the rationale and consequences associated with a parent's decision to disc...
Neonatal deaths account for 42% of inpatient pediatric deaths. Unfortunately, there is little eviden...
OBJECTIVE: To determine parent's views on how death of their children should have been handled. DES...
OBJECTIVE:To investigate the rationale and consequences associated with a parent's decision to discu...
Background: Parents who have experienced the death of a child from cancer have unique bereavement ne...
Objective: To evaluate the feasibility and perceived benefits of conducting physician-parent follow-...
A child’s death upends a family’s anticipated life cycle and embodied parental roles; resulting in a...
Background. The admission of an infant to the neonatal intensive care unit represents for many paren...
A child’s death upends a family’s anticipated life cycle and embodied parental roles; resulting in a...
Objective: The death of a child from cancer is an intense and life-changing loss for a parent. Guide...
BACKGROUND Parents facing the death of their child have a strong need for compassionate professio...
Hospitalization of a child in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) is extremely stressful for pa...
Context: approximately 25% of children diagnosed with cancer eventually die. Losing a child puts par...