7 results on '"Hill, Douglas L."'
Search Results
2. Changes in Parental Hopes for Seriously Ill Children.
- Author
-
Hill DL, Nathanson PG, Carroll KW, Schall TE, Miller VA, and Feudtner C
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological physiology, Adult, Critical Illness therapy, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life psychology, Young Adult, Critical Illness psychology, Decision Making physiology, Hope physiology, Parents psychology, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Background: Hopes of parents of children with serious illness play an important role in decision-making and coping. Little is known about how parent hopes change over time. We describe the changes in parent hopes across multiple domains and time intervals, examine hopes in a subgroup of parents whose child died, and explore the maintenance of domains over time., Methods: In a mixed-methods prospective cohort study on decision-making, parents of seriously ill children reported demographic characteristics and hopes at baseline and reported any changes in hopes at 4-, 8-, 12-, 16-, and 20-month follow-up visits. Hopes were coded into 9 domains. Hope changes and domain changes were identified for each parent at each visit., Results: One hundred and ninety-nine parents of 158 patients most often reported hopes in the domains of quality of life (75%), physical body (69%), future well-being (47%), and medical care (34%). Hope percentages increased over time for quality of life (84%), future well-being (64%), and broader meaning (21%). The hope domains reported by parents of children who died were similar to the rest of the sample. The majority of parents who completed 5 to 6 follow-up visits changed at least 1 domain. At the individual parent level, some domains revealed considerable change over time, whereas other domains were stable among a subset of parents., Conclusions: The specific hopes and overall areas of hope of parents of seriously ill children vary over time, although most hopes fall within 4 major areas. Accordingly, clinicians should regularly check with parents about their current hopes., Competing Interests: POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2018 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Parental Concordance Regarding Problems and Hopes for Seriously Ill Children: A Two-Year Cohort Study.
- Author
-
Hill DL, Nathanson PG, Fenderson RM, Carroll KW, and Feudtner C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Attitude to Death, Child, Child Health statistics & numerical data, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Critical Illness epidemiology, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Infant, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Philadelphia epidemiology, Prevalence, Young Adult, Attitude to Health, Critical Illness psychology, Hope, Parent-Child Relations, Parents psychology, Quality of Life psychology, Terminal Care psychology
- Abstract
Context: Parents of a seriously ill child may have different concerns and hopes for their child, and these concerns and hopes may change over time., Objectives: In a mixed-method prospective cohort of parental dyads of children with serious illness, to describe the major problems and hopes perceived for their child, examine the degree of concordance between parents, and assess whether prevalence and concordance change over time., Methods: Eighty-four parents (42 dyads) of seriously ill children reported the major problems and hopes for their children at baseline. Thirty-two parents (16 dyads) answered the same questions at 24 months. Problems and hopes were classified into nine domains. Observed concordance was calculated between parents on each domain. Data for parents of 11 children who died are reported separately., Results: The most common major problem and hope domains at baseline were physical body, quality of life, future health and well-being, and medical care. Parental dyads demonstrated a moderately high percentage of concordance (69%) regarding reported problem domains and a slightly lower percentage of concordance on hopes (61%), with higher concordance for more common domains. Domain prevalence and concordance changed considerably at 24 months. Parents of children who later died showed markedly different patterns of domain prevalence and more extreme patterns of concordance., Conclusion: Parents of children with serious illness may have different perspectives regarding major problems and hopes, and these perspectives change over time. Parents of sicker children are more likely to be in either complete agreement or disagreement regarding the problems and hopes they identify., (Copyright © 2017 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Problems and hopes perceived by mothers, fathers and physicians of children receiving palliative care.
- Author
-
Hill DL, Miller VA, Hexem KR, Carroll KW, Faerber JA, Kang T, and Feudtner C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Decision Making, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Professional-Family Relations, Quality of Life, Young Adult, Fathers psychology, Hope, Mothers psychology, Palliative Care psychology, Physicians, Problem Solving
- Abstract
Background: The quality of shared decision making for children with serious illness may depend on whether parents and physicians share similar perceptions of problems and hopes for the child., Objective: (i) Describe the problems and hopes reported by mothers, fathers and physicians of children receiving palliative care; (ii) examine the observed concordance between participants; (iii) examine parental perceived agreement; and (iv) examine whether parents who identified specific problems also specified corresponding hopes, or whether the problems were left 'hopeless'., Method: Seventy-one parents and 43 physicians were asked to report problems and hopes and perceived agreement for 50 children receiving palliative care. Problems and hopes were classified into eight domains. Observed concordance was calculated between parents and between each parent and the physicians., Results: The most common problem domains were physical body (88%), quality of life (74%) and medical knowledge (48%). The most common hope domains were quality of life (88%), suffering (76%) and physical body (39%). Overall parental dyads demonstrated a high percentage of concordance (82%) regarding reported problem domains and a lower percentage of concordance on hopes (65%). Concordance between parents and physicians regarding specific children was lower on problem (65-66%) and hope domains (59-63%). Respondents who identified problems regarding a child's quality of life or suffering were likely to also report corresponding hopes in these domains (93 and 82%, respectively)., Conclusion: Asking parents and physicians to talk about problems and hopes may provide a straightforward means to improve the quality of shared decision making for critically ill children., (© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Hope in the Midst of Terminal Illness
- Author
-
Hill, Douglas L., Feudnter, Chris, Gallagher, Matthew W., book editor, and Lopez, Shane J., book editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Hopes, Therapeutic Honesty, and Adaptation in the Midst of Dying and Death.
- Author
-
Feudtner, Chris and Hill, Douglas L.
- Subjects
- *
ADAPTABILITY (Personality) , *BIOETHICS , *CAREGIVERS , *CATASTROPHIC illness , *DIGNITY , *HONESTY , *HOPE , *PATIENT-professional relations , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *SURVIVAL , *TERMINAL care , *PSYCHOLOGY of the terminally ill , *PAIN management , *ATTITUDES toward death , *FAMILY attitudes - Abstract
In this article, the authors discuss hope, therapeutic honesty and adaptation in the midst of dying and death. Topics include identification of short-comings in the care of dying patients; mishandling of negative ethical and clinical repercussions for the care that patients with serious illness receive; and connection between denial and acceptance of the ultimately personally fatal consequence of patient condition.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Regoaling: a conceptual model of how parents of children with serious illness change medical care goals.
- Author
-
Hill, Douglas L., Miller, Victoria, Walter, Jennifer K., Carroll, Karen W., Morrison, Wynne E., Munson, David A., Kang, Tammy I., Hinds, Pamela S., and Feudtner, Chris
- Subjects
- *
DECISION making , *GOAL (Psychology) , *HOPE , *MATHEMATICAL models , *PALLIATIVE treatment , *PARENTS , *THEORY - Abstract
Background: Parents of seriously ill children participate in making difficult medical decisions for their child. In some cases, parents face situations where their initial goals, such as curing the condition, may have become exceedingly unlikely. While some parents continue to pursue these goals, others relinquish their initial goals and generate new goals such as maintaining the child's quality of life. We call this process of transitioning from one set of goals to another regoaling. Discussion: Regoaling involves factors that either promote or inhibit the regoaling process, including disengagement from goals, reengagement in new goals, positive and negative affect, and hopeful thinking. We examine these factors in the context of parental decision making for a seriously ill child, presenting a dynamic conceptual model of regoaling. This model highlights four research questions that will be empirically tested in an ongoing longitudinal study of medical decision making among parents of children with serious illness. Additionally, we consider potential clinical implications of regoaling for the practice of pediatric palliative care. Summary: The psychosocial model of regoaling by parents of children with a serious illness predicts that parents who experience both positive and negative affect and hopeful patterns of thought will be more likely to relinquish one set of goals and pursue a new set of goals. A greater understanding of how parents undergo this transition may enable clinicians to better support them through this difficult process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.