Development of the Parental Experience with Care for Children with Serious Illnesses (PRECIOUS) quality of care measure
Ang, Felicia Jia Ler; Gandhi, Mihir; Ostbye, Truls; Malhotra, Chetna; Malhotra, Rahul; Chong, Poh Heng; Amin, Zubair; Chow, Cristelle Chu Tian; Tan, Teresa Shu Zhen; Tewani, Komal; Finkelstein, Eric Andrew (2024)
Ang, Felicia Jia Ler
Gandhi, Mihir
Ostbye, Truls
Malhotra, Chetna
Malhotra, Rahul
Chong, Poh Heng
Amin, Zubair
Chow, Cristelle Chu Tian
Tan, Teresa Shu Zhen
Tewani, Komal
Finkelstein, Eric Andrew
2024
Bmc Palliative Care
66
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202404173685
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202404173685
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
Background: Parent-reported experience measures are part of pediatric Quality of Care (QoC) assessments. However, existing measures were not developed for use across multiple healthcare settings or throughout the illness trajectory of seriously ill children. Formative work involving in-depth interviews with parents of children with serious illnesses generated 66 draft items describing key QoC processes. Our present aim is to develop a comprehensive parent-reported experience measure of QoC for children with serious illnesses and evaluate its content validity and feasibility. Methods: For evaluating content validity, we conducted a three-round Delphi expert panel review with 24 multi-disciplinary experts. Next, we pre-tested the items and instructions with 12 parents via cognitive interviews to refine clarity and understandability. Finally, we pilot-tested the full measure with 30 parents using self-administered online surveys to finalize the structure and content. Results: The Delphi expert panel review reached consensus on 68 items. Pre-testing with parents of seriously ill children led to consolidation of some items. Pilot-testing supported feasibility of the measure, resulting in a comprehensive measure comprising 56 process assessment items, categorized under ten subthemes and four themes: (1) Professional qualities of healthcare workers, (2) Supporting parent-caregivers, (3) Collaborative and holistic care, and (4) Efficient healthcare structures and standards. We named this measure the PaRental Experience with care for Children with serIOUS illnesses (PRECIOUS). Conclusions: PRECIOUS is the first comprehensive measure and has the potential to standardize assessment of QoC for seriously ill children from parental perspectives. PRECIOUS allows for QoC process evaluation across contexts (such as geographic location or care setting), different healthcare workers, and over the illness trajectory for children suffering from a range of serious illnesses.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [23422]