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Decisional Regret about Surgical and Non-surgical Issues after Genitoplasty among Caregivers of Female Infants with CAH

Authors :
Rachel S. Fisher
David A. Diamond
Blake W. Palmer
Natalie J. Nokoff
Cortney Wolfe-Christensen
Yee-Ming Chan
Amy C Tishelman
Cindy L. Buchanan
Earl Y. Cheng
Laurence S. Baskin
Kristy J. Scott Reyes
Larry L. Mullins
Douglas E. Coplen
Dix P. Poppas
Hannah C Espeleta
Amy B. Wisniewski
Source :
J Pediatr Urol
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Summary Introduction Caregivers of female infants with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) often confront complex medical decision-making (e.g., early feminizing genitoplasty). Objective This study aimed to evaluate the relevant medical decisions and subsequent decisional regret of caregivers following their child's genitoplasty. Study design Caregivers (N = 55) were recruited from multidisciplinary treatment programs for participation in a longitudinal study. Qualitative data was collected at 6–12 months following feminizing genitoplasty to evaluate caregiver-reported decision points across their child's treatment. Quantitative exploratory analysis evaluated pre-operative predictors of subsequent decisional regret. Discussion When prompted about their decision-making and potential regret, most caregivers (n = 32, 80%) reported that their daughter's genital surgery was their primary medical decision. Specific themes regarding genital surgery included the timing and type of surgery. Most caregivers reported no decisional regret (62%), with 38% reporting some level of regret. Greater pre-operative illness uncertainty predicted heightened decisional regret at follow-up, p = .001. Conclusion Two-thirds of caregivers of female infants with CAH reported not regretting their decision-making. Nevertheless, over one-third of caregivers reported some level of regret, suggesting the need for improvements in shared decision-making processes. Many, but not all, families reported that this regret was related to surgical decision-making. Reducing caregiver illness uncertainty (e.g., providing clear information to families) may increase their satisfaction with decision-making. Further research is needed to determine how the evolving care practices surrounding early genitoplasty will impact families. Download : Download high-res image (307KB) Download : Download full-size image Summary Figure . Levels of Caregiver Decisional Regret measured by the Decisional Regret Scale. Note. Conventional categorical classification of scores was used: 0 = “no regret”, 1 to 25 = “mild regret,” 26 to 100 = “moderate to severe regret”.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
J Pediatr Urol
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....905540c00235244ce6251dfaa812cd88