The Institute for Patient- and Family-Centered Care`s (IPFCC) definition of family-centered care (FCC) includes the following four core concepts: respect and dignity, information sharing, participation, and collaboration. To date, research has focused on the provider experience of FCC in the PICU; little is known about how parents of children hospitalized in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) experience FCC. Articles were included if they were published between 2006 and 2016, included qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods results, related to care received in a PICU, and included results that were from a parent perspective. 49 articles from 44 studies were included in this review; 32 used qualitative/mixed methods and 17 used quantitative designs. The concepts of respect and dignity, information sharing, and participation were well represented in the literature, as parents reported having both met and unmet needs in relation to FCC. While not explicitly defined in the IPFCC core concepts, parents frequently reported on the environment of care and its impact on their FCC experience. As evidenced by this synthesis, parents of critically ill children report both positive and negative FCC experiences relating to the core concepts outlined by the IPFCC. There is a need for better understanding of how parents perceive their involvement in the care of their critically ill child, additionally; the IPFCC core concepts should be refined to explicitly include the importance of the environment of care. Keywords: Family-Centered Care, PICU, parent, Institute for Patient and Family Centered Care The Institute for Patient- and Family-Centered Care (IPFCC) defines family-centered care (FCC) as encompassing four core concepts: respect and dignity, information sharing, participation in care and decision-making, and collaboration between patients, families, and the healthcare team (www.ipfcc.org). In pediatrics, respect and dignity encompass how the child and the child’s family are treated; information sharing involves communicating with and making information available to patients and families in formats they understand. Participation entails including the family in decision making and the child’s care at the level the family chooses, and collaboration comprises partnering with families to improve policy, programs, and infrastructure. As an approach to care, the goal of FCC is to improve patient and family satisfaction and care outcomes; FCC has the potential to influence health care delivery at levels ranging from social and institutional policies to daily interpersonal interactions with staff and family (www.ipfcc.org). Partnerships between families and the health care team are essential in pediatrics where children are often unable to self-report symptoms or treatment preferences due to their developmental stage or health status. Thus, parents are charged with communicating on the child’s behalf, necessitating that parents be included in their child’s care. Additionally, parents are most often responsible for the child’s care after discharge, making critical that they are involved in care and decisions during the child’s hospitalization to aid in the transition to home. Multiple professional organizations have released statements stressing the importance of adopting FCC as a policy in the pediatric hospital environment (e.g., The Institute of Medicine, 2001; American Academy of Pediatrics, 2003, 2012; American Nurses Association, 2008, 2015); however, the extent to which FCC as defined by the IPFCC is enacted in pediatric critical care units (PICU) is largely unknown. To inform understanding of FCC in pediatric intensive care, an integrative literature review was performed; this paper reports on the findings. As a mode of care delivery, FCC is relatively new in the care of pediatric patients and families. As recent as the mid-20th century children were cared for in hospital wards with no or minimal visitation allowed from family members. Parents of children with chronic health conditions and key advocacy groups joined together to bring about change and prioritized FCC in the late-20th century (Johnson, 1990). Slowly the care of hospitalized children has shifted to a more family-centered model; however the PICU has been slow to adopt these standards (Butler, Copnell, & Willetts, 2013; Foglia & Milonovich, 2011). The introduction of FCC in pediatric settings was intended to change how providers interact with families and care for hospitalized children. Based on FCC principles, the family is central to the child’s health and pediatric care should focus on partnership with the family (Just, 2005). These ways of interacting can be challenging in PICUs which have traditionally limited family visitation, involvement in direct care, and decision-making (Kuo et al., 2012). Published first-hand accounts of parents who have had children treated in a PICU illustrate poor implementation of the core concepts of FCC as envisioned by the IPFCC (Merk & Merk, 2013; Wills & Wills, 2009). While others have examined FCC implementation in pediatric environments including the PICU, these syntheses have focused on healthcare professionals’ experiences and perspectives rather than those of parents. Given that parents are the voice, advocate, and caregiver for their child including during critical pediatric illness, their perspective is critical to understanding FCC implementation in the PICU. The overall purpose of this review was to examine parents’ perspectives on and experiences with implementation of the FCC core concepts in the context of having a child in the PICU. The primary aim of this integrative review (Whittemore & Knafl, 2005) was to examine the extent to which published research articles concerning parent perspectives on their involvement in their child’s care in a PICU demonstrate implementation of the four core concepts of FCC. Secondary aims were to determine if the definitions of these four concepts require refinement or expansion to incorporate parental perspectives and experiences, and whether the evidence suggests additional core concepts reflecting parents’ perspectives on FCC. The searches were guided by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA: Moher, 2009). Search strategies were developed by the first author (CH) in consultation with a research librarian. The databases searched between July and October 2016 included: Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Excerpta Medica Database (Embase), PubMed, and PsycINFO. To be included in this review, reports had to be available in English, published between January 1, 2006 and October 31, 2016, include qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods results, relate to the PICU, and include results of parental perspective via parent report regarding PICU care. To reflect the most recent research on FCC in the PICU and ensure timeliness and clinical relevance, the literature search was limited to reports published within the last 10 years. Articles that included other care environments or reports of healthcare professionals’ experiences were included only if the parent report and PICU environment were distinguishable among the results. Excluded were firsthand accounts, editorials, and other works that were not primary research. Search terms included PICU, pediatric intensive care unit, family-centered care, parent, collaboration, decision-making, participation, and information. Keywords and Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) terms were customized to the database searched. Additionally, truncation of words was used when appropriate to reflect syntax and search rules common to individual databases (Havill et al., 2014). The first author critically appraised the retained articles using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (MMAT) (Pluye et al., 2011), a tool designed to assess the methodological quality for systematic reviews that contain qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods studies. An article could score 0, 25, 50, 75, or 100% based on how many assessment items the article addressed. No articles were excluded based on poor quality; for individual quality scores see Table 1.
Data were extracted from included reports using an extraction template structured to summarize results related to each FCC core concept as outlined by the IPFCC, as well as evidence for refining core concepts definitions and/or adding concepts not previously explicated as central to FCC. The first author (CH) extracted data from the remaining articles using the template, and then either the second (KK) or third author (SS) reviewed the abstractions for completeness and conceptual fit. The authors met to review and resolve data extraction discrepancies. Table 1 summarizes the articles included in this integrative review. The IPFCC core concepts respect and dignity, information sharing, and participation were evident in the reports of parent perspectives; collaboration was mentioned just once in the implications section of one article. An additional review finding was the impact of the physical and cultural environment of the PICU on the parents’ perception of FCC implementation. In the following sections we discuss our findings based on each IPFCC core concept, the need for FCC model refinement, and parent report of whether implementation of the FCC core concepts was met in the PICU. The IPFCC defines respect and dignity as “health care practitioners listen to and honor patient and family perspectives and choices. Patient and family knowledge, values, beliefs and cultural backgrounds are incorporated into the planning and delivery of care” (www.ipfcc.org). We operationalized this core concept as results addressing “how patients and their families are treated”. Themes included perceptions of the PICU physical and cultural environment and expressions of compassion and support from providers. Perceptions of the PICU Physical and Cultural EnvironmentA common theme throughout the research reports was the PICU environment and how it impacted parents’ experiences. Although not explicitly mentioned in the definitions of any core concept, the PICU environment (e.g., patient room, overall unit, waiting room) was experienced by parents as conveying respect and dignity for the family and their situation and, attempts to preserve dignity through attention to the child and parents’ privacy and emotional decompression, or lack thereof. The structural layout of PICUs ranges from open units where patient spaces are separated only by curtains, semi-private room units that house 2-4 patients, and private room units. Parents identified aspects of each layout that contributed to their comfort or discomfort. Parents interpreted rooms that were clean and comfortable (Abuqamar, Arabiat, & Holmes, 2016), close by waiting rooms (Sturdivant & Warren, 2009), and availability of telephones and lockers (Meert, Briller, Schim, & Thurston, 2008a) as indicators of respect. For parents, lack of respect was communicated by unavailability of bathrooms for families on the unit (Carnevale et al., 2011), and the time-consuming process for accessing the PICU from the waiting room (Meert et al., 2008a). For parents, other indicators of lack of respect included the PICU noise level, which made relaxation or rest difficult (Abuqamar et al., 2016; Meert et al., 2008a), small room size, inadequate space for personal items or a comfortable chair near the bedside (Majdalani, Doumit, & Rahi, 2014; Meert et al., 2008a), no facilities for parents to address their personal needs such as hygiene, nutrition, or rest (Meert et al., 2008a; Vasli, Dehghan-Nayeri, Borim-Nezhad, & Vedadhir, 2015), and no distractions for parents such as television (Smith da Nobrega Morais & Geraldo da Costa, 2009). When a waiting area was associated with the PICU, parents also found negatives related to this. Parents remarked that the waiting area was generally an uncomfortable social space where stressed family members exhibited a wide range of emotional and sometimes distressing behaviors, with no one “in charge” (Meert et al., 2008a). One report described the waiting room furniture as not conducive to sitting or resting (Sturdivant & Warren, 2009). Expressions of Compassion and Support from ProvidersIn the PICU, delivering care in ways that parents experience as dignified and respectful requires not only technical skill, but behaviors that convey the staff’s compassion, support, and understanding of families’ experiences. Parents discussed how being treated like a human being conveyed respect (Colville et al., 2009). Respect was conveyed through professional attitudes (Latour et al., 2011a) and by listening to parents without judgment (Meyer, Ritholz, Burns, & Truog, 2006). They commented that nurses were compassionate, kind, and caring (Cantwell-Bartl & Tibballs, 2013; Smith da Nobrega Morais & Geraldo da Costa, 2009; Sturdivant & Warren, 2009), treated their child with love and tenderness (Mattsson, Arman, Castren, & Forsner, 2014), and provided what parents perceived to be good care (Mortensen et al., 2015; Smith da Nobrega Morais & Geraldo da Costa, 2009). While not specifically referring to nurses, other articles reported that parents thought that the attention their child received was caring and compassionate, and staff relayed empathy and commitment to providing good care (Delemos et al., 2010; Latour et al., 2011a; Meyer et al., 2006; Sturdivant & Warren, 2009). Parents also discussed respect as it was shown to their child; providers conveyed a sense of love, comfort, and care for their child and treated the child as an individual (McGraw et al, 2012). Parents noticed when providers respected the personhood of their child by knowing their name and gender (Meert, Briller, Schim, Thurston, & Kabel, 2009). Physicians too were viewed as being kind and compassionate; parents appreciated when they delivered information in consoling and supportive tones (Meert et al., 2008b). Parents in one study stated, “She treated my daughter as a mother more than a physician” (Majdalani et al., 2014, p. 221). Parents who witnessed resuscitation attempts on other children were comforted by seeing the staff display emotions during these events (Tinsley et al., 2008). Parents also experienced behaviors that did not convey respect and dignity. Parents commented on a perceived lack of compassion (Abib El Halal et al., 2013; Cantwell-Bartl & Tibballs, 2013; Meyer et al., 2006), cold and callous communication (Abib El Halal et al., 2013, Meert et al., 2007; Meert et al., 2008b), and inappropriate body language by providers (Colville et al., 2009). Parents in one report described feeling abandoned by their physician after their child’s death (Meert et al., 2007). In the study by Maxton (2008), mothers commented that they felt nurses would judge them if the mother cried; one parent noted having been chastised by a nurse for crying. Cantwell-Bartl & Tibballs (2013) found that parents reported hearing insensitive comments by nurses and that providers had poor interpersonal skills and a lack of empathy; lack of empathy by providers was also reported by Meyer et al. (2006). Common courtesies such as providers introducing themselves, and being addressed directly by physicians were viewed as signs of respect (Levin, Fisher, Cato, Zurca, & October, 2015; Stickney et al., 2014b). Conversely, Aronson, Yau, Helfaer, and Morrison (2009) found that medical team members introduced themselves to parents just 11% of the time when observed on rounds. In a study by Colville et al. (2009), parents reported that providers did not introduce themselves. Furthermore, Delemos et al. (2010) found that only one third of enrolled parents could identify the physician in charge of their child’s care. Parents also experienced absence of respect when they perceived physicians as “talking down” to them (Carnevale et al., 2007), and when staff caused them to “feel like a number” (Meert et al., 2008b). Delemos et al. (2010) found that parents perceived discrimination based on race, education, and income that strained relationships with providers; some parents felt that medical costs impacted their child’s care (Carnevale et al., 2011). Parents felt disrespected when providers did not honor their religious or faith traditions near the child’s end of life (Meert et al., 2009). Some parents of children with severe antecedent disabilities reported that providers lacked understanding or appreciation of their child as a person and their baseline level of function (Graham et al., 2009). Parents of children with severe anomalies perceived their child as being treated less than human because of their developmental differences (Meert et al., 2009). Parents appreciated providers who gave compassionate, honest, and trustworthy support regardless of the child’s age or condition, as shown through body language, words, or actions (Meert et al., 2009). Parents reported high satisfaction scores when they felt supported by nurses (Mortensen et al., 2015). In a study by Roets, Rowe-Rowe, and Nel (2012), 71% of mothers felt emotionally supported when providers assured them about their child’s likely recovery and 61% when providers displayed emotional concern. This study also revealed that 44% of parents felt emotionally supported when providers were friendly and spoke in a friendly manner, overall, the articles included in this review suggest that implementation of respect and dignity continues to be unmet from the perspective of parents with children in the PICU. Information sharing is defined as “health care practitioners communicate and share complete and unbiased information with patients and families in ways that are affirming and useful. Patients and families receive timely, complete, and accurate information in order to effectively participate in care and decision-making” (www.ipfcc.org). In coding the extracted data, the authors operationalized information sharing as “results addressing communication and availability of information to families”. We identified four themes related to information sharing: using understandable language, medical rounds, amount/type of communication, and satisfaction with communication. Using understandable languageAcross reports, the evidence suggested that for parents the most important aspect of communication was that clinicians used language that the family could comprehend. Parents expressed needing information: in “normal people language” rather than medical jargon that parents didn’t always understand (Abib El Halal et al., 2013; Carnevale et al., 2007; Majdalani et al., 2014), and in “layman’s terms” (Stickney et al., 2014b) so it is understandable (Jee et al., 2012, Sturdivant & Warren, 2009). Parents in the study by Meert et al. (2008b) indicated that the pace at which information was given was important for how well they absorbed information, given the stress, fatigue, and emotions evoked by some conversations. Some parents indicated that terminology used by providers led them to misunderstand the severity of their child’s illness (Maxton, 2008), or why certain procedures were not being performed (Abib El Halal et al., 2013). Additionally, parents in the study by Majdalani et al. (2014) indicated that they would be hesitant communicating with or asking questions in a language that was not their preferred language. Parents recommended that when communicating with families in regions where multiple languages are common, the staff should communicate in the parents’ preferred language as both a sign of respect and to maximize comprehension. Medical RoundsMedical rounding in the PICU are opportunities for parents to participate in and to be an active part of the information exchange guiding their child’s care. Medical rounding was a focus for nine articles included in this review. Parent experiences with medical rounding are pertinent to both information sharing and participation. Aronson et al. (2009) found that 98% of parents liked to be present for rounds and 97% thought it was helpful to hear the discussion of the child’s case by the group. Ninety-one percent of parents said their presence during rounds gave them more confidence in the medical team caring for their child. Similarly, Cameron, Schleien, and Morris (2009) reported that 89% of parents believed that being present during rounds helped them to understand their child’s condition and the treatment plan. Although some parents reported that hearing multiple treatment options discussed during rounds caused stress, 36% believed rounds promoted transparency between parents and providers. Parents also reported that participating in medical rounds about their child provided opportunities to receive and exchange information with the team (Graham et al., 2009; Ladak et al., 2013; Levin et al., 2015; McPherson, Jefferson, Kissoon, Kwong, & Rasmussen, 2011), ask questions (Graham et al., 2009; Phipps et al., 2007), and correct misinformation that the staff had about the child (McPherson et al., 2011). Stickney et al. (2014b) reported that parents found benefit from rounds in that they were able to hear the plan of care directly from the team and observe team interactions. Medical rounds also helped the parents to understand the role of each team member in their child’s care. Yet some parents reported not being comfortable with participating in medical team rounding. Parents reported feeling anxious (Graham et al., 2009; Levin et al., 2015) about information they might hear and they preferred that someone update them individually after rounds (Graham et al., 2009; Stickney, Ziniel, Brett, & Truog, 2014a). Amount/Type of CommunicationAcross studies, parents indicated preferences related to the amount and type of information as well as the delivery mode. Parents reported expecting and needing regular, frequent feedback on their child’s progress and condition (Ames et al., 2011; Carnevale et al., 2011; Delemos et al., 2010; Majdalani et al., 2014, Mattsson et al., 2014; Meert et al., 2008b; Meyer et al., 2006; Stickney et al., 2014b; Sturdivant & Warren, 2009). Parents in the Ames et al. (2011) study indicated as those who know the child best, part of their parental role was to acquire information about their child’s treatment and condition. Parents expressed preferences regarding certain aspects of communication including: coordination of communication between team members (Delemos et al., 2010), that information be delivered in person (Meert et al., 2008a), at the child’s bedside (Meyer et al., 2006), that physicians sit while doing so (Meert et al., 2008b), and also be readily accessible for updates and to address parents’ questions, which may not be formulated until after the information has been digested (Meert et al., 2008b; Oxley, 2015). Satisfaction with CommunicationSimilar to the type and amount of information preferred, parents expressed satisfaction and dissatisfaction with communication in the PICU. Parents reported that doctors and nurses communicated well (Cantwell-Bartl & Tibballs, 2013; Carnevale et al., 2007, Meert et al., 2008b) and humanely (Cantwell-Bartl & Tibballs, 2013; Carnevale et al., 2011) with parents. They also preferred communication that was open, honest, patient, and clear (Colville et al., 2009; Delemos et al., 2010; Graham et al., 2009; Jee et al., 2012; Meert et al., 2008b). Contrary to those who expressed satisfaction with communication, parents were dissatisfied when they felt “talked down to” by physicians, when physicians seemed cold, detached, or rushed (Carnevale et al., 2011), or when staff were perceived as insensitive when communicating (Cantwell-Bartl & Tibballs, 2013; Meert et al., 2007, Meert et al., 2008b). Parents reported being concerned when they thought that information was being withheld from them (Abib El Halal et al., 2013; Cantwell-Bartl & Tibballs, 2013; Carnevale et al., 2007; Latour et al., 2011a; Meert et al., 2007; Meert et al., 2008b) or that they were ignored by staff when expecting to receive updated information (Meert et al., 2008b). Parents reported getting inconsistent information from various providers, which resulted in confusion and frustration (Colville et al., 2009; Delemos et al., 2010; Meert et al., 2008b; Meert et al., 2009; Meyer et al., 2006). Parents reported receiving different or contradictory information and perceived “finger pointing” between providers; they thought there were too many providers involved in care to know what others were doing (Meert et al., 2009). Despite examples of perceived poor communication, implementation of information sharing was largely met from the perspective of parents of children in the PICU. The IPFCC defines participation as “patients and families are encouraged and supported in participating in care and decision-making at the level they choose” (www.ipfcc.org). We operationalized this core concept as “taking part in the care of the ill child” and our analysis identified four major themes: parents as experts, how parents participated, impact of environment/providers on participation, and medical rounds as a forum for participation. Parent as expertsParents are the “experts” regarding their child, and important values or considerations of the family’s context should be considered in their child’s care. Across the included studies, parents reported how they were treated as experts and also how their expertise was ignored. Parents considered themselves the experts on their child and expected to contribute valuable information to staff (Graham et al., 2009; McPherson et al., 2011; Stickney et al., 2014b). Parents were pleased when the staff solicited their advice and when they witnessed staff implement their suggestions when communicating with or comforting the child (Ames et al., 2011); parents stated they valued being listened to (Meyer et al., 2006). Parents of children with severe antecedent conditions were most comfortable with their child’s care when parent input was considered with regard to the child’s functioning prior to hospitalization (Graham et al., 2009). Delemos et al. (2010) found that parents had more confidence in physicians who asked for parents’ opinions and considered parent observations about the child. However, other studies reported that some parents did not feel as though they were listened to by staff (Abuqamar et al., 2016; Carnevale et al., 2007; Delemos et al., 2010) and believed that this resulted in poorer outcomes for their child (Delemos et al., 2010). Parents said they were hesitant to express dissenting thoughts or concerns about their child’s care because they didn’t want to be labeled as difficult (Delemos et al., 2010) or annoying (Smith da Nobrega Morais & Geraldo da Costa, 2009); one mother noted that she must be a “good girl” to ensure a good relationship with the staff and therefore good care for her child (Smith da Nobrega Morais & Geraldo da Costa, 2009). This highlights the power differential imbedded in the interactions between various providers and parents that inherently shape the PICU as a unique care environment. How parents participatedParents sought to be present and involved in the care of their critically ill child (Ames et al., 2011; Graham et al., 2009; Latour et al., 2011a; McGraw et al., 2012; Meert et al., 2007; Meert et al., 2009; Meyer et al., 2006; Rennick et al., 2011; Roets et al., 2012; Sturdivant & Warren, 2009). Some parents referred to the importance of being at the bedside to care for and comfort the child (Ames et al., 2011). Others participated by being vigilant to the child’s health status and care (Graham et al., 2009; McGraw et al., 2012; Sturdivant & Warren, 2009) and advocating for their child (McGraw et al., 2012; October et al., 2014). Nonetheless, some included reports provided evidence of parents being unable to participate in the physical care of their child at the level they desired because of the highly technical nature of the PICU environment and its cultural structures. Mothers in the Cantwell-Bartl and Tibballs (2013) study reported a loss of intimacy with their infants due to limits placed on their contact with the child because of their critical condition and the child’s equipment needs, which they linked to problems “bonding”; three mothers and five fathers said they had no bond with their infant, that the infant “belongs to the staff”. Parental roles in the child’s care were also altered in the context of the hospitalization of a chronically ill child who had been cared for at home; parents had difficulty reconciling what care they were allowed to provide in the PICU versus the care they were responsible for providing at home (Graham et al., 2009). Parents described feelings of fear, helplessness, and stress related to their inability to participate in care at the desired level (Colville et al., 2009; Jee et al., 2012; Smith da Nobrega Morais & Geraldo da Costa, 2009); one mother stated the PICU felt like a “prison” but that she had to stay and participate for the sake of her child (Smith da Nobrega Morais & Geraldo da Costa, 2009). Decision making was an important theme in how parents participated in the care of their child in the PICU. A wide range of preferences for participation in treatment decisions was revealed, from parents who wanted physicians to make all decisions (Latour et al., 2011a), those who wanted shared decision making with physicians (Carnevale et al., 2011, Delemos et al., 2010; Madrigal et al., 2012, Majdalani et al., 2014; Meyer et al., 2006), and those who felt decision making was solely a parental responsibility (Carnevale et al., 2007; Madrigal et al., 2012). Some parents indicated that they were not allowed to participate in decision making to the extent they preferred (Abib El Halal et al., 2013; Carnevale et al., 2007; Carnevale et al., 2011; Ebrahim et al., 2013). These results highlighted how important information sharing might be in shaping parents’ ability to participate. If information is withheld, lacking, skewed, not given in a timely manner, or presented too quickly or in complex language, parents feel that they are unable to understand and equally participate in the decision making processes. Impact of Environment/Providers on Parent ParticipationIn the PICU environment with its amount of equipment and sensory stimulations, parents may need guidance from providers to be active in care at the bedside. Parents acknowledged that nursing staff was helpful in showing them ways to be involved at the bedside and how to physically care for the ill child (Ames et al., 2011; Latour et al., 2011a; Mattsson et al., 2014). Parents in the Mattsson et al. (2014) study noted that nurses “built a bridge” to the children so the parents could reach them, meaning that nurses showed parents how and where to make physical contact with the child to participate in their care. As much as providers can facilitate parent participation, in the included studies parents predominantly reported environment- and provider-related barriers to participating in their child’s care at the level they preferred. Parents reported that PICU sights and sounds were anxiety provoking (Colville et al., 2009); frequent reminders not to touch equipment connected to their child likely made this worse (Macdonald et al., 2012). Parents reported needing but not receiving guidance from nurses about how or where they could touch their child (Ames et al., 2011). Carnevale et al. (2007) reported that some parents thought nurses imposed a physical barrier to the child. Authors of multiple studies reported that parents described the PICU environment as constraining parent’s participation because of lack of places for parents to sit at the bedside and having to leave the PICU when patient emergencies arose (Colville et al., 2009; Macdonald et al., 2012; Maxton, 2008; Meert et al., 2008a; Meert et al., 2009; Vasli et al., 2015). Baird et al. (2015) found that PICU rules impacted how family members participated in care and how much time they could be at the bedside. These findings were echoed by those of another study in which parents reported they were only allowed to visit their child in the PICU for 2 hours per day (Abuqamar et al., 2016). Parents also identified ways the PICU environment facilitated their parenting by offering possibilities for parents to personalize the room to their child’s tastes (Macdonald, Liben, Carnevale, & Cohen, 2012). Parents felt having a private room lent to having sufficient privacy and quiet for them and their child (Latour et al., 2011a). However, reports more often stated how the environment impeded parenting behaviors. When describing their child’s PICU room, parents mentioned lack of privacy and ability to control who entered their room (Abib El Halal et al., 2013; McGraw et al., 2012). Parents from one study commented that the PICU environment was not designed with children in mind such as child-friendly décor or allowing items from home (Vasli et al., 2015). Parents in PICUs without private rooms were asked to leave during crises with other children on the unit (Gaudreault & Carnevale, 2012; Meert et al., 2008a) Parents unwillingly witnessed uncomfortable or graphic scenes due to a lack of privacy and wanting to stay with their own child during such an event (Gaudreault & Carnevale, 2012). Parents commented on social disturbances on the unit that led them to question their (and their child’s) safety (Meert et al., 2008a). Medical RoundsAs stated earlier, involvement in medical rounds could be an avenue for parents to both gain updated information about their child and participate in care decisions. Cameron et al. (2009) reported that 75% of parents who participated in rounds felt that this allowed them to be more involved in treatment decision making. Among parents participating in rounds, some reported reduced personal tension related to the child’s condition (Ladak et al., 2013), equated participation with fulfilling their parental role to engage in their child’s care (Levin et al., 2015), or felt welcomed and enjoyed attending rounds (Stickney et al., 2014b). As stated previously, some parents reported that rounds could be anxiety provoking and stressful (Cameron et al., 2009), while 10% of parents in the McPherson et al. (2011) study were unsure if they had participated in rounds. These findings illustrate the need to better educate PICU providers on ways that they can explain the rounding process to parents and teach them how to actively engage to the level they choose. The IPFCC defines collaboration as “patients and families are also included on an institution-wide basis. Health care leaders collaborate with patients and families in policy and program development, implementation, and evaluation; in health care facility design; and in professional education, as well as in the delivery of care” (www.ipfcc.org). While no included articles reported collaboration as defined by the IPFCC, they do provide evidence of changes implemented in some settings (Abid El Halal et al., 2013). Based on the limited findings of this integrative review, however, broader implementation of collaboration with parents is needed in designing policies and programs that inform the culture and education delivered in these settings, and designing the physical spaces of PICU environment. This integrative review provides a comprehensive description of published reports regarding parent appraisals of implementation of the four IPFCC acknowledged core concepts in the PICU. Of the four core concepts, evidence of implementation being met and unmet with regards to respect and dignity, information sharing, and participation was present in the parent report articles and provide direction for advancing the implementation of FCC in the PICU. Evidence of collaboration as defined by the IPFCC was not present in the parent report literature we included, but this might also be a limitation of a retrospective review of published research. Our review also revealed that the core concepts, while explicitly defined by the IPFCC, have overlapping qualities. For instance, the PICU environment had implications for respect and dignity, information sharing, and participation. Although evidence of collaboration was not observed, implementation of collaboration (as defined by the IPFCC) and its outcomes have the potential to impact the environment for the enhancement of FCC in the PICU. As such, based on the results of this integrative review, we propose that environment be conceptualized as both physical and cultural spaces that are experienced by parents as affecting respect and dignity, information sharing, and participation in FCC in the PICU (Figure 2). We recognize that collaboration exists in many hospitals but this might not have been an aim of the studies identified for this review. Conceptualization of FCC in the PICU as a result of this integrative review. The evidence suggests that participation, respect and dignity, and information sharing are all impacted by environment. No evidence of collaboration was found in the included articles and as such this concept is not included in our post-review conceptualization. Providing environments where parents can be present, have unrestricted visitation, perform basic activities of daily living and hygiene tasks for themselves, and feel comfortable, safe, and welcomed is a basic form of respect and dignity that each parent should be afforded while their child is in the PICU. In a study by Roscigno, Savage, Grant, and Philipsen (2013), parents of children with traumatic brain injury reported parental role limitations when their ability to visit their child in the PICU was regulated or when hospital personnel acted as gatekeepers preventing access to their child. In pursuing implementation of FCC in the pediatric environment, unrestricted parental visitation should be a basic right. Parents appreciated having places to receive information from staff who sit down, indicating a need for an environment that allows for this type of information exchange. LeGrow, Hodnett, Stremler, and Cohen (2014) developed a parent briefing intervention in which pediatric physicians and nurses were asked to use a briefing template and physically sit with parents while updating them on their child’s condition. Parents responded positively to the intervention, they felt their presence was helpful and important and that they were able to have questions and concerns addressed and procedures explained. There was no indication of whether physically sitting with the parents changed the parent perception of the communication or whether it was the structured briefing with a physician and nurse that made the difference. Regardless, this study highlights that parents find on-going personalized information exchange with physicians and nurses to be necessary and important to help parents understand their child’s medical information. The environment of the child’s room was perceived by parents as impacting their ability to physically participate in their child’s care; for parents to be active in care at the level they choose staff should instruct parents as to how PICU equipment supports the child and how parents can safely touch, hold, and participate in care. Equipment configurations may need modifications so parents can physically reach the bedside to engage in the child’s care. Geoghegan et al. (2016) found that parents of children in the ICU believed that nurses facilitated parents’ involvement in the care of their child. The parents in this study looked to nurses to both physically and emotionally guide them in how to care for their child while hospitalized in the ICU. Themes relating to information sharing addressed the type and amount of information, as parents’ overall satisfaction with communication and medical rounding. Mentioned by many families as key to implementation of information sharing being met was use of understandable language, meaning both the family’s preferred language and lay language to describe the child’s condition, prognosis, and treatment. Additionally, recognizing that information exchange and uptake might be impacted by parent stress, fatigue, and anxiety is important for PICU staff. When studying parents of infants hospitalized in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), Mackley, Winter, Guillen, Paul, and Locke (2016) found that during times of complex information exchange regarding the condition and care of their infants, one third of parents scored as having suspected limited health literacy. Furthermore, when assessing nurses’ subjective interpretations of parent understanding of complex information in discharge teaching, they perceived adequate comprehension by parents 83.3% of the time while 32% of parents exhibited suspected limited health literacy. This result underscores the need for ongoing communication of understandable information to parents of children in the PICU, for validation that what the family “heard” is what the providers intended to convey, and for clarification of misunderstandings. Repeating information in multiple formats (spoken, written, or visual demonstration) might help frazzled parents to absorb the wealth of complex information they are given while stressed. The IPFCC definition for information sharing indicates that practitioners communicate in ways that are affirming and useful to families. In addition, we recommend modifying this definition to include using simple, minimally technical terms that families can understand in the family’s preferred language, and then verifying that parents understood the information correctly. Some parents viewed participation in medical rounds as means to exchange information with the healthcare team. However, staff should find alternative ways of sharing information with those parents who declined participation in medical rounds or who experience them as confusing or anxiety provoking. Parent participation in medical rounds should not be a substitute for frequent individualized information exchanges with families. Treating parents with respect includes respecting their decision whether to participate in medical rounds and determining what alternative opportunities are available for them to participate in care and exchange information with staff. The analysis identified four participation themes including parents as experts, how parents participate, impact of environment and providers, and medical rounds. As defined by the IPFCC, parents should be encouraged and supported to participate in care at the level they choose. Key to this are shared understandings between parents and providers regarding how, when, and the amount of participation each parent desires. Developing plans for parent participation and frequently re-evaluating this plan for changes is important to support parents’ participation and establish how they will do that. Because the evidence suggests that rounds are an important forum for information sharing and communication, providers should frequently discuss with parents whether their preference about participating in rounds has changed as their child’s stay in the PICU progresses and as the environment becomes more familiar, the child’s condition evolves, and parent anxiety fluctuates. This review found no evidence that parents reported having been engaged in efforts with other members of the healthcare team or health care system on policy and program development, facility design, and education. We speculate that collaboration is happening in the FCC of pediatric patients but this work is not currently in the research literature. The IPFCC website lists hospitals with established patient and family advisory councils to improve FCC; the first author of this paper is a member of such an advisory board. Patient and family advisory boards/councils are becoming more prevalent at children’s hospitals across the United States in an effort to collaborate and improve the FCC experience (www.ipfcc.org); these boards/councils should be encouraged to publish the results of any programs of research or quality improvement programs they implement. This integrative review reveals that despite the push for FCC in the PICU environment, parent report indicates there is still much work to be done to ensure full implementation. Parents reported both positive and negative implementation of FCC as related to three of the IPFCC core concepts. This review adds a parent perspective to the body of FCC literature and highlights areas in which FCC implementation is both met and unmet. Additional research is needed to determine the knowledge base of clinicians in regard to FCC so that when parents report areas in which implementation of the FCC core concepts are unmet, we can understand whether these perceptions can be attributed to lack of understanding, lack of effort, or lack of institutional support. Understanding factors contributing to the disconnect between how FCC is defined and implemented is an important future step. This integrative review is the first to report solely on parent perspectives of the implementation of FCC core concepts as defined by the IPFCC. Limitations include the analysis of published literature that may not have reported all of its data; authors of the included studies may have only reported on data relevant to their research question and in turn parent report data specific to FCC concepts were not included in their results. This integrative review contained a large number of participants across studies and even though fathers were underrepresented compared to mothers, the number of studies including fathers in the sample is evidence of the strength of the PICU literature overall. This review used rigorous extraction methods including checks on each data extraction by a second reviewer and a mixed methods quality appraisal tool to assess quality of the included reports, which overall were above average. Implementation of family-centered care is considered the benchmark in caring for pediatric patients and their families. Parents of children cared for in the PICU often struggle with the severity of their child’s illness and how to care for their child in this environment. The findings from this integrative review reveal per parent report that they encounter positive and negative implementation of core concepts of FCC while their child is in the PICU. Nurses and other health care providers must be cognizant of the core concepts of FCC and how their actions can impact parents both positively and negatively. Highlights
The authors wish to thank Cecelia Roscigno, PhD, RN, CNRN for her review of this manuscript and for offering insightful and constructive feedback. Funding The first author acknowledges training support from T32NR007091, awarded to The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Nursing by the National Institute of Nursing Research. Publisher's Disclaimer: This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final citable form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.
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