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Research Priorities in Pediatric Palliative Care

Authors :
Barbara L. Jones
Javier R. Kane
Meaghann S. Weaver
Brian S. Carter
Deborah V. Gibson
Deena R. Levine
Justin N. Baker
Pamela S. Hinds
Doralina L. Anghelescu
Sarah Friebert
Belinda N. Mandrell
Melody J. Cunningham
Joanne Wolfe
Liza Johnson
Chris Feudtner
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Objective To synthesize the perspectives of a broad range of pediatric palliative care (PPC) clinicians and parents, to formulate a consensus on prioritization of the PPC research agenda. Study design A 4-round modified Delphi online survey was administered to PPC experts and to parents of children who had received PPC. In round 1, research priorities were generated spontaneously. Rounds 2 and 3 then served as convergence rounds to synthesize priorities. In round 4, participants were asked to rank the research priorities that had reached at least 80% consensus. Results A total of 3093 concepts were spontaneously generated by 170 experts and 72 parents in round 1 (65.8% response rate [RR]). These concepts were thematically organized into 78 priorities and recirculated for round 2 ratings (n = 130; 53.7% RR). Round 3 achieved response stability, with 31 consensus priorities oscillating within 10% of the mode (n = 98; 75.4% RR). Round 4 resulted in consensus recognition of 20 research priorities, which were thematically grouped as decision making, care coordination, symptom management, quality improvement, and education. Conclusions This modified Delphi survey used professional and parental consensus to identify preeminent PPC research priorities. Attentiveness to these priorities may help direct resources and efforts toward building a formative evidence base. Investigating PPC implementation approaches and outcomes can help improve the quality of care services for children and families.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4e84c62000724afdabdfe3654fa44ac4