Health professionals' attitudes and competence can be improved by knowledge of user involvement and research and facilitating the inclusion of parents in decision making by influencing the culture, routines and resources in the health service.
AimTo explore parents' experiences on parental involvement in decision‐making about their child's health care at the hospital and to identify how health professionals can improve parental involvement.DesignAn explorative descriptive qualitative study within a constructivist research paradigm.MethodsIndividual semistructured interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of 12 parents. Qualitative content analysis was performed.ResultsThis study gives unique insight into how parental involvement in children's healthcare decisions influence parents' ability to cope with the parental role at the hospital. The results showed that parents' competence and perceived influence and control over their child's health care appeared to affect how they mastered their role of involvement in decision‐making. Individually tailored and respectful facilitation of parental involvement in these decisions by health professionals seemed to improve parents' influence, control and ability to cope with the parental role. Nurses should thus strengthen parents' sense of coherence enhancing the quality of health care.
In many western countries, parents have a legal right to influence and be involved in decision-making (DM) surrounding their children's healthcare. This ensures that the healthcare is customized as far as possible to meet the children's and families' needs and preferences. However, parental involvement in such DM is not sufficiently implemented and the parental role during hospitalizations has become demanding. More knowledge is required to inform health professionals (HPs) about how to improve parental involvement in DM from a health-promoting perspective. The aims of this study were to explore parents' experiences of how HPs facilitate their involvement in the DM surrounding their child's healthcare and to identify how HPs can improve parental involvement at the hospital. This was an explorative, descriptive qualitative study within a constructivist research paradigm, comprising a purposive sample of 12 parents participating in individual semi-structured interviews. Qualitative content analysis was performed. The findings showed that HPs' sensitivity to parents' capacity, resources and needs was essential in order to facilitate the latter's involvement in DM. HPs' sensitivity also seemed to influence the quality of communication and the HP-parent relationship. Moreover, these factors appeared to affect parents' coping ability during their children's hospitalization.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.