“…3,13,[36][37][38] A metasummary of qualitative analyses of patient and family needs in pediatric palliative care found that family needs are quite high, specifically in the areas of interactions with staff, psychosocial needs, spiritual issues, decision-making, sibling needs, cultural needs, pain and symptom management, information needs, and health care delivery and accessibility. 39 More specifically, in a qualitative study of parents who had recently participated in difficult conversations with physicians in the pediatric intensive care setting, 11 specific physician interpersonal behaviors were identified as helpful to parents 40 : empathy, availability, treating the child as an individual, respecting parents' knowledge of the child, allowing hope, body contact that communicated warmth, thoroughness, going beyond the call of duty, accountability, willingness to be questioned, and attention to the suffering of the child. 40 Similarly, a study with bereaved parents found that parents value these specific elements of communication from their physicians 25 : comprehensive and complete information; clarity of information, use of clear language; ease of access to caregivers and their explanations throughout the course of care; pacing of information, soliciting of parents' emotional responses and addressing their questions; consistency of information; honesty, lack of false hope; empathy as demonstrated by verbal, nonverbal, and affective communication; summary statements and next steps.…”