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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Families and health‐care professionals' perspectives and expectations of family‐centred care: hidden expectations and unclear roles

Imelda Coyne
- 01 Oct 2015 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 5, pp 796-808
TLDR
This research investigated how FCC was enacted from families and nurses' perspectives and found implementation continues to be problematic worldwide.
Abstract
Background and objective Family-centred care (FCC) is viewed as a pivotal concept in the provision of high-quality nursing care for children and their families, yet implementation continues to be problematic worldwide. This research investigated how FCC was enacted from families and nurses' perspectives. Design Descriptive qualitative approach using elements of analysis from grounded theory method. Data were collected though individual interviews with 18 children aged 7-16 years, their parents (n = 18) and 18 nurses from two children's hospital and one children's unit in a large general hospital in Ireland. Results Four key themes were identified: expectations; relying on parents' help; working out roles; and barriers to FCC. Nurses wholeheartedly endorsed FCC because of the benefits for families and their reliance on parents' contribution to the workload. There was minimal evidence of collaboration or negotiation of roles which resulted in parents feeling stressed or abandoned. Nurses cited busy workload, under-staffing and inappropriate documentation as key factors which resulted in over-reliance on parents and hindered their efforts to negotiate and work alongside parents. Conclusions Families are willing to help in their child's care but they require clear guidance, information and support from nurses. Hidden expectations and unclear roles are stressful for families. Nurses need skills training, adequate resources and managerial support to meet families' needs appropriately, to establish true collaboration and to deliver optimal family-centred care.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Family-Centered Care for Children With Cerebral Palsy Conceptual and Practical Considerations to Advance Care and Practice

TL;DR: In this article, the conceptual and practical considerations in family-centered care for children with cerebral palsy and their families are discussed, including explorations of causal relationships between family centered care principles, elements of caregiving practice, client change processes, and child and family outcomes.
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Involving Parents in Managing Their Child's Long-Term Condition—A Concept Synthesis of Family-Centered Care and Partnership-in-Care

TL;DR: The key attributes of engagement, collaboration and empowerment are outlined in a practical framework of involvement which may promote parent-professional collaboration for families of children with long-term conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effectiveness of paediatric occupational therapy for children with disabilities: A systematic review.

TL;DR: Evidence supports 40 intervention indications, with the greatest number at the activities‐level of the International Classification of Function, and yellow light interventions should be accompanied by a sensitive outcome measure to monitor progress and red light interventions could be discontinued because effective alternatives existed.
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The supportive care needs of parents with a child with a rare disease: results of an online survey.

TL;DR: The findings highlight that parents with a child with a rare disease have common unmet needs regardless of what disease their child has, and such information may allow health providers to improve child outcomes through improving parental supportive care.
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Clinical Implications of Family‐Centered Care in Stroke Rehabilitation

TL;DR: Rehabilitation nurses should view stroke patients and family caregivers as a unit and using family‐centered strategies can help nurses provide appropriate, individualized care during rehabilitation.
References
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Book

Basics of qualitative research : techniques and procedures for developing grounded theory

TL;DR: Theoretical Foundations and Practical Considerations for Getting Started and Techniques for Achieving Theoretical Integration are presented.
Journal Article

Basics of Qualitative Research: Techniques and Procedures for Developing Grounded Theory

TL;DR: (PDF) Thematic Analysis in Qualitative research | Anindita (PDF) Qualitative Research ProcessBasics of QualitativeResearch | SAGE Publications IncQualitative Research Method Summary JMEST
Book

Constructing grounded theory : a practical guide through qualitative analysis

Kathy Charmaz
TL;DR: K Kathy Charmaz's excellent and practical guide to grounded theory in nursing and how to do qualitative research in nursing is welcomed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Constructing grounded theory : A practical guide through qualitative analysis

TL;DR: Charmaz as mentioned in this paper presented a practical guide through qualitative analysis to construct grounded theory, using qualitative analysis, and showed that qualitative analysis can be used to understand grounded theory in a practical way.
Journal ArticleDOI

Family centred care: a review of qualitative studies.

TL;DR: Negotiation between staff and families, perceptions held by both parents and staff roles influenced the delivery of family centred care and a sub-theme of cost of family Centred care to families and staffs was discovered.
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