Background: Previous studies have found that parents of children with cancer desire more prognostic information than is often given even when prognosis is poor. We explored in audio‐recorded consultations the kinds of information they seek. / Methods: Ethnographic study including observation and audio recording of consultations at diagnosis. Consultations were transcribed and analyzed using an interactionist perspective including tools drawn from conversation and discourse analysis. / Results: Enrolled 21 parents and 12 clinicians in 13 cases of children diagnosed with a high‐risk brain tumor (HRBT) over 20 months at a tertiary pediatric oncology center. Clinicians presented prognostic information in all cases. Through their questions...
The goal is to present how shared decisionmaking in paediatric oncology occurs from the viewpoints o...
Professional guidelines encourage physicians to provide children with as much information regarding ...
Background: In this single-site study, we evaluated the feasibility of a parent-clinician communicat...
BackgroundPrevious studies have found that parents of children with cancer desire more prognostic in...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Parents of children with cancer perceive deficits in quality of prognosti...
Background: Effective communication in support of clinical decision-making is central to the pediatr...
Background: The aim of this study was to clarify the degree of information provision to children wit...
Brain tumors are the most common form of solid tumors in childhood and are characterized by an unce...
Background Many parents report a strong desire to take on information-giving roles, and believe they...
Little guidance exists for discussing prognosis in early acute care with parents following children’...
BACKGROUND: Prospective investigation of medical dialogue is considered the gold standard in prognos...
Objective: To explore the end-of-life experience of children with brain tumors and their families. D...
This study investigated parents' information needs and involvement in decision-making processes affe...
To assess parents' ability to absorb information that their child's cancer was incurable and to iden...
CONTEXT: Little is known about how parents of children with advanced cancer classify news they recei...
The goal is to present how shared decisionmaking in paediatric oncology occurs from the viewpoints o...
Professional guidelines encourage physicians to provide children with as much information regarding ...
Background: In this single-site study, we evaluated the feasibility of a parent-clinician communicat...
BackgroundPrevious studies have found that parents of children with cancer desire more prognostic in...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Parents of children with cancer perceive deficits in quality of prognosti...
Background: Effective communication in support of clinical decision-making is central to the pediatr...
Background: The aim of this study was to clarify the degree of information provision to children wit...
Brain tumors are the most common form of solid tumors in childhood and are characterized by an unce...
Background Many parents report a strong desire to take on information-giving roles, and believe they...
Little guidance exists for discussing prognosis in early acute care with parents following children’...
BACKGROUND: Prospective investigation of medical dialogue is considered the gold standard in prognos...
Objective: To explore the end-of-life experience of children with brain tumors and their families. D...
This study investigated parents' information needs and involvement in decision-making processes affe...
To assess parents' ability to absorb information that their child's cancer was incurable and to iden...
CONTEXT: Little is known about how parents of children with advanced cancer classify news they recei...
The goal is to present how shared decisionmaking in paediatric oncology occurs from the viewpoints o...
Professional guidelines encourage physicians to provide children with as much information regarding ...
Background: In this single-site study, we evaluated the feasibility of a parent-clinician communicat...