CARING FOR THE CAREGIVER: EXPLORING THE EXPERIENCE OF CAREGIVING FOR A CHID WITH MEDICAL COMPLEXITY

  • Teicher J
  • Weiser N
  • Arje D
  • et al.
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Children with medical complexity (CMC) represent a growing population in the paediatric healthcare system. CMCs' multiple health needs, illness severity, and fragility lead to a high degree of caregiver burnout, parental employment loss, and other social and financial consequences. Healthcare providers must consider a holistic view of the family, including consideration of social determinants of health [SDOH]: socio-economic status, employment, quality of housing, availability of social support, and access to healthcare services. This study addresses a gap in current research by exploring how caring for a CMC exacerbates social inequalities, and how these challenges may be mitigated. OBJECTIVES: 1. What are the SDOH impacting CMC and their families? 2. How do families report the impact of their child's medical complexity on their social circumstances? DESIGN/METHODS: A qualitative description approach was used to enable rich data collection through semi-structured interviews until thematic saturation was reached. Nine interviews were conducted with CMC caregivers who were chosen by purposeful sampling. The interview guide was developed by expert consultation and iteratively refined. Ethics approval and written consent were obtained. Interviews were recorded and transcribed verbatim. Three team members independently coded the interviews for recurrent themes to inform qualitative content analysis. RESULTS: Caregiving for a CMC is all-consuming, requiring parents to take on roles including planner, medical professional, medical educator, and advocate. Parents of CMC report three major areas negatively impacted by caregiving: 1) physical and mental health 2) personal relationships; and 3) finances. Additionally, three themes emerged describing enablers for resiliency: 1) the CMC's health status when well or stable in hospital 2) acceptance of one's limitations as a caregiver and of the family's 'new normal' and 3) broad supports including medical, personal, financial, and educational. CONCLUSION: The wellbeing of CMC families is impacted by medical and social factors. An interdisciplinary model of care may offset some of the caregiver's advocacy and medical educator responsibilities. Paediatricians can support families of CMC by providing comprehensive care for all components of the child's health status, and by including routine assessment of the family's SDOH. Finally, explicit discussion about parental expectations and caregiver burnout helps foster a positive therapeutic relationship with the family.

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APA

Teicher, J., Weiser, N., Arje, D., & Orkin, J. (2018). CARING FOR THE CAREGIVER: EXPLORING THE EXPERIENCE OF CAREGIVING FOR A CHID WITH MEDICAL COMPLEXITY. Paediatrics & Child Health, 23(suppl_1), e55–e56. https://doi.org/10.1093/pch/pxy054.139

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