Sharron L. Docherty, Raymond Barfield, Cheryl Thaxton and Debra Brandon On completion of this chapter the reader will be able to: • Identify the scope of and changing trends in care of children with special needs. • Identify the major reactions of and effects on the family of a child with a special need. • Define the stages of adjustment to the diagnosis of a chronic condition. • Recognize the impact of the illness or condition on the developmental stages of childhood. • Outline nursing interventions that promote the family’s optimal adjustment to the child’s chronic disorder. • Outline nursing interventions that support the family at the time of death. http://evolve.elsevier.com/wong/essentials Advances in medical and nursing care, such as the increasing viability of extremely preterm infants, the portability of life-sustaining technology (e.g., total parental nutrition, ventilatory support), and life-extending treatments for children with conditions that previously would have led to an early death (e.g., malignancies, genetic conditions) (Burke and Alverson, 2010), have led to an exponential rise in the prevalence of children with complex and chronic diseases. These children have complex conditions involving several organ systems and require multiple specialists, technologic supports, and community services to assist them to function to their healthiest potential. The complex, high level of skill required to meet their daily health care needs and the continuous nature and potential volatility of the condition sets this group apart from the broader population of children with special health care needs (Harrigan, Ratliffe, Patrinos, and others, 2002; Rehm and Bradley, 2005). A range of terms, such as medically complex, technology dependent, and multiply handicapped, have been used to describe this vulnerable population of children (Carnevale, Rehm, Kirk, and others, 2008; Cohen, Friedman, Nicholas, and others, 2008; Harrigan, Ratliffe, Patrinos, and others, 2002; Miles, Holditch-Davis, Burchinal, and others, 1999; O’Brien and Wegner, 2002; Watson, Townsley, and Abbot, 2002). Frequent and prolonged hospitalizations; complex and multisystem health and developmental needs; and reliance on technology and care that cross hospital, clinic, and home settings are the key characteristics that all of these terms seek to signify about the children they are used to represent (Harrigan, Ratliffe, Patrinos, and others, 2002). The nature and severity of childhood chronic and complex conditions is widely heterogeneous. Table 18-1 is a nonexhaustive sampling of conditions organized by specialty. However, it is the health and developmental consequences of these diagnoses, such as ongoing functional impairment; neurodevelopmental disability; dependence on medical technology; and the need for ongoing skilled, supportive care from health care providers and family members, that render these children and families as particularly vulnerable. The impact of chronic and complex illness in children is wide ranging. Although many authors have described the rise in prevalence that has come about because of advances in medical care (Cohen, Friedman, Nicholas, and others, 2008; Council on Children with Disabilities, 2005; Haffner and Schurman, 2001; Mentro, 2003), accurate estimates of the numbers of affected families are not known (Carnevale, Rehm, Kirk, and others, 2008). These conditions present most families with additional tasks, responsibilities, and concerns (Ray, 2002). A child’s activity level and developmental opportunities can be affected. Days can be lost from school. Children with complex chronic conditions may be at increased risk for behavior or emotional problems. Parents may lose days from work, experience financial strain, and be challenged both emotionally and physically as they cope with care of the child. TABLE 18-1 Chronic Conditions of Childhood Siblings are also affected by having a “different” brother or sister and may simultaneously feel guilt and anger or jealousy toward their ill sibling. Clinicians need to know that siblings of children with chronic illnesses are at risk for negative psychological effects (Sharpe and Rossiter, 2002). Parents need encouragement and assistance with understanding the reactions of siblings to having a chronically ill family member (e.g. behavioral regression, anxiety, withdrawal, apathy). Additionally, secondary losses such as the ability to participate in extracurricular activities or social events occur because of routines imposed by the affected child’s chronic condition. A developmental focus also considers family development. The life cycle of the family unit reflects changing ages and needs of family members, as well as changing external demands. A family member’s serious illness can cause significant stress or crisis at any stage of the family life cycle. Just as with individual development, family development may be interrupted or even regress to an earlier level of functioning. Nurses can use the concept of family development to plan meaningful interventions and evaluate care (see Developmental Theory, Chapter 3). Children’s physical and emotional health, as well as their cognitive and social functioning, is strongly influenced by how well their families function (Schor, 2003). The importance of family-centered care—a philosophy that considers the family as the constant in the child’s life—is especially evident in the care of children with special needs (see also Family-Centered Care, Chapter 1). As parents learn about the child’s health care needs, they often become experts in delivering care. Health care providers, including nurses, are adjuncts to the child’s care and need to form partnerships with parents. Effective communication and negotiation between parents and nurses are essential to forming trusting and effective partnerships and finding the best ways to meet the needs of the child and family (Corlett and Twycross, 2006). Collaborative relationships are characterized by communication, dialogue, active listening, awareness, and acceptance of others’ differences (Schor, 2003). The disclosure of a serious chronic or complex condition of a child is one of the most stressful aspects of communication between families and health care professionals. Often, parents have suspected for some time that something is wrong with their child and believe that their concerns were minimized or ignored by health care professionals (Smaldone and Ritholz, 2011; Thomlinson, 2002; Whitehead and Gosling, 2003). After a diagnosis is made, numerous studies have shown that parents are not always satisfied with the way in which information is given. Factors that influence parent dissatisfaction with communication include disrespectful attitudes, breaking bad news in an insensitive manner, withholding information, and changing a treatment course without preparing the child and family (Hsiao, Evan, and Zeltzer, 2007). Conversely, parents report satisfaction when they perceived health care providers to be available, demonstrate competence, and engage the child and parent in care decision making (Hsiao, Evan, and Zeltzer, 2007). Similar factors are important in communication of changes in the child’s condition throughout the course of the illness. Another important aspect of family-centered care of children with chronic and complex conditions is establishing a therapeutic relationship with the child and family, which has been shown to predict improved health-related outcomes (Denboba, McPherson, Kenney, and others, 2006). Families, most often the mother, take on enormous responsibility in providing technical care and symptom management of their child’s condition outside the health care institution (O’Brien and Wegner, 2002; Raina, O’Donnell, Rosenbaum, and others, 2005; Swallow and Jacoby, 2001). To build successful therapeutic relationships with families, it is necessary for nurses to recognize parents’ expertise with regard to their child’s condition and needs. Care conferences, especially multidisciplinary meetings that include the family and key health professionals, provide an opportunity for sharing ideas and expressing feelings or concerns. Health care environments for children with serious illnesses are fraught with obstacles that serve as barriers to successful therapeutic relationships with families. For example, the complex, multidisciplinary care required is often characterized by fragmented, noncohesive approaches to care. Continuity of care can be a challenge in acute care hospitals today, and this makes it difficult to establish relationships and understand communication styles. Issues of culture, ethnicity, and race affect access to services, utilization, and follow-through with referrals and recommendations (Coker, Rodriguez, and Flores, 2010; van Dyck, Kogan, McPherson, and others, 2004; Wise, Wampler, Chavkin, and others, 2002; Wood, Smith, Romero, and others, 2002; Zuvekas and Taliaferro, 2003). For some ethnic and minority populations, cultural understandings of illness, the structure of family life, social roles for individuals with disabilities, and other factors related to the perception of children may differ from those of mainstream American culture. These factors may affect family needs and family choices regarding the care of their child with special needs. Although culture cannot completely explain how an individual will think and act, understanding cultural perspectives can help the nurse anticipate and understand why families may make certain decisions. Cultural attributes such as values and beliefs regarding illness or chronic condition and its causation, social roles for people who are ill or disabled, family structure, the role of children, childrearing practices, self versus group orientation, spirituality, and time orientation also affect a family’s response to illness or chronic condition in a child (Carnevale, Alexander, Davis, and others, 2006; Carter, 2002; Marshall, Olsen, Mandleco, and others, 2003; Rehm, 1999; Sterling and Peterson, 2003). When parents are informed of their child’s chronic illness, interpreters familiar with both culture and language should be used. Children, family members, and friends of the family should not be used as translators because their presence may prevent parents from openly discussing the issues. When working with people of cultural backgrounds different from their own, nurses must listen carefully with an initial goal of understanding and articulating the family’s perspective. The ability to interpret the mainstream medical culture to the family is also important. Furthermore, every effort is made to incorporate traditional cultural beliefs of a family into treatment plans. It is important to keep in mind that “cultural norms” may not always apply to every family from a shared background. Nurses who assess the unique needs of each family, listen, and keep themselves open to novel ways of meeting the individual needs of the child and family will likely be successful in establishing a therapeutic relationship. Developing a care plan in conjunction with the family, considering their preferences and priorities, is an important first step in formulating a plan that best meets the family’s needs, no matter what their cultural background (Ahmann, 1994; Coker, Rodriguez, and Flores, 2010; Ochieng, 2003). Shared decision making among the child, family, and health care team can result from open, honest, culturally sensitive communication and the establishment of a therapeutic relationship among the family and health care providers. In a shared decision-making model, the health care professionals provide honest, clear information regarding diagnosis, prognosis, treatment options, and risk–benefit assessment. The patient and family then share information with the health care team regarding important family values, acceptable levels of discomfort or inconvenience, and the ability to comply with treatments being recommended (Charles, Gafni, and Whelan, 1997; Kon, 2010). This process allows them to discuss all options in terms of the risks and benefits to the child and family, the prognosis or expected course of the illness, and the impact on the family’s resources (Box 18-1). Together the parents and health care team can make decisions that are best for the family and child at the time the decision is made (Kon, 2010). Normalization refers to the efforts family members make to create a normal family life, their perceptions of the consequences of these efforts, and the meanings they attribute to their management efforts (Knafl, Darney, Gallo, and others, 2010). For chronically ill children, such efforts may include attending school, pursuing hobbies and recreational interests, and achieving employment and a level of independence. For their families, it may entail adapting the family routine to accommodate the ill or disabled child’s health and physical needs (McDougal, 2002). Children with chronic and complex conditions and their families face numerous challenges in achieving normalization. Families move between the “normal” of living with the experience of chronic childhood illness and the “normal” of the healthy outside world; they often redefine “normal” based on their particular experiences, needs, and circumstances (Deatrick, Knafl, Murphy-Moore, 1999; Gantt, 2002; Nelson, 2002). Normalization may be an important mediator of illness-related stressors (e.g., treatment demands, uncertainty) on family outcomes Nurses can assist families in normalizing their lives by assessing the family’s everyday life, social support systems, coping strategies, family cohesiveness, and family and community resources. Interventions could include encouraging families to reduce stress through delegation of care and family tasks, identifying ways to incorporate care into current routines, structuring the home environment to encourage the child’s engagement in age-appropriate activities, and ensuring families have access to appropriate community support services (Jokinen, 2004; Shepard and Mahon, 2000). Being supportive of the child’s illness and treatment and actively including the family in all aspects of care will improve their self-esteem and promote further development (Shepard and Mahon, 2000). Home care represents the return to a system and set of priorities in which family values are as important in the care of a child with a chronic health problem as they are in the care of other children. Home care seeks to achieve goals that are consistent with the developmental model (Stein, 1985): • Normalize the life of the child, including those with technologically complex care, in a family and community context and setting. • Minimize the disruptive impact of the child’s condition on the family. With appropriate training and support, families provide complex procedures and treatments in the home. Parents are challenged to retain a homelike setting among monitors, ventilators, and other sophisticated equipment. Throughout the text, home care is discussed as appropriate for specific conditions. The process of transition from hospital to home is elaborated on in Chapters 20 and 21. Managed care programs have become the major form of health care provision in the United States (Jackson, 2000). This model of care has brought both opportunities and challenges with respect to the care of children with chronic and complex conditions. Although managed care may promote continuity and coordination of care for children and families with private insurance, it has had an unfavorable impact on relatively resource-limited families caring for children with complex chronic illnesses (Huffman, Brat, Chamberlain, and other, 2010). Children rely on adults for access to health care and follow-up with treatment regimens, making it necessary to manage the child’s care in the context of the family (McPherson, Weissman, Strickland, and others, 2004; van Dyck, Kogan, McPherson, and others, 2004). A major goal in working with the family of a child with chronic or complex illness is to support the family’s coping and promote their optimal functioning throughout the child’s life. Long-term, comprehensive, family-centered approaches extend beyond supporting the child and family during the critical periods of diagnosis and hospitalization. Rather, comprehensive care involves forming parent–professional partnerships that can support a family’s adaptation across the trajectory of the illness to the many changes that may be necessary in day-to-day life, determine expectations of and for the child, and provide a long-term perspective (Box 18-2). The impact of a child’s medical or developmental condition is often experienced over time, initially as a crisis at the time of diagnosis, which may occur at birth, after a long period of diagnostic testing, or immediately after a tragic injury. The impact may also be felt before the diagnosis is made, when parents are aware that something is wrong with their child but before medical confirmation (Thomlinson, 2002; Whitehead and Gosling, 2003). The diagnosis and initial discharge home are critical times for parents (Coffey, 2006). Several factors can make it particularly difficult, including a long duration of uncertainty in the diagnostic process, negative perceptions of chronic illness, insufficient information, and lack of mutual trust between parents and their child’s health care team (Garwick, Patterson, Bennett, and others, 1995; Monterosso, Kristjanson, Aoun, and others, 2007; Nuutila and Salanterä, 2006). Parental feelings of shock, helplessness, isolation, fear, and depression are common (Coffey, 2006; Nuutila and Salanterä, 2006). Throughout the first year, parents struggle to accept the child’s diagnosis, care, and uncertainty of the future (Coffey, 2006). Providing explicit and uncomplicated information to parents in an empathic way (Nuutila and Salanterä, 2006); assessing the family’s daily routine, living conditions, background knowledge, skills and abilities, and coping behaviors; and evaluating the family’s understanding of the information can encourage optimal support at the time of diagnosis and initial discharge home. It is also necessary to reassess parents’ needs for information and support on a routine basis (Nuutila and Salanterä, 2006). Other critical times include the exacerbation of the child’s physical symptoms, which increases parental care. These crises often involve medical intervention and rehospitalization. Frequently, the child does not return to his or her precrisis level of functioning, and parents and family must adapt to new care needs and schedules. Instability may also follow transition points on the illness trajectory. For example, changes in caregivers and significant chronologic age milestones can increase parental stress, and advocating for the child during these times is essential. Supporting parents, respecting their stress and emotions, and acknowledging their role as team members in the care of their child are important aspects of nursing care (Coffey, 2006; Nuutila and Salanterä, 2006). Each member of a family who has a child with a chronic or complex illness is affected by the experience (Sullivan-Bolyai, Sadler, Knafl, and others, 2003). The effects on the parents and their responses may be so intense that they directly influence the other members’ reactions and the child’s own coping. In addition to the stress of grieving for the loss of a perfect child, parents are affected by whether or not they receive positive feedback from interactions with their child. Many parents feel satisfaction and fulfillment from the parenting role. For others, parenting may be a series of unrewarding experiences that contribute to feelings of inadequacy and failure (Box 18-3). These responses may be most evident in parents who are responsible for the child’s care. For example, parents may become preoccupied with their ability to carry out certain procedures, overlooking the child’s personal comfort and satisfaction or failing to offer praise for anything less than perfect cooperation or performance. They may pursue a frustrating activity until they achieve “success”—long after the child has become irritable and uncooperative. As a result, parents can become caught in a pattern of interaction that is mutually unrewarding and minimally productive. This situation may become exacerbated by disagreements or lack of support from other family members and judgment from caregivers and others in the community. For these parents, several strategies may be helpful, including education regarding what can reasonably be expected of their child, assistance in identifying the child’s strengths, praise for a parental job well done, and respite care so that parents can renew their energies. Parenting a child with a complex chronic condition requires much more than raising a typical child. In addition to attending to the routine aspects of parenting, parents of chronically ill children take on the added responsibility of performing complex technical care and symptom management, advocating for their child, and seeking and coordinating health and social services for their ill or disabled child (Kirk, Glendinning, and Callery, 2005). These added responsibilities must then be balanced with the needs of other family members, extended family and friends, and personal health and obligations to minimize consequences to the overall functioning of the family (Coffey, 2006; Ray, 2002). Enormous demands may be placed on parental time, energy, and financial resources. Mothers and fathers in the same family often adjust and cope differently as parents of a child with a complex condition. Whereas some mothers experience a peaks-and-valleys periodic crisis pattern, most fathers tend to experience a steady, gradual recovery. Some research suggests that mothers of children with certain conditions may be more susceptible to psychologic distress and fatigue than fathers (Tong, Kandala, Haig, and others, 2002). Mothers are most often the primary caregiver and are more likely than fathers to give up their jobs to care for their children, often resulting in social isolation (Coffey, 2006). Whereas mothers often have greater needs for social support and positive appraisal of the situation, fathers are more likely to use self-controlling behaviors to cope (Goldbeck, 2001; Mastroyannopoulou, Stallard, Lewis, and others, 1997). Fathers of children with disabilities struggle with issues that may be distinct from those of the mothers (Swallow, Macfadyen, Santacroce, and others, 2011). Fathers may think that their role of protector is challenged because they do not know how to help and cannot protect their family from the seemingly overwhelming recurring problems. With today’s increased emphasis on fathers’ involvement in the lives of their children, this loss is felt more profoundly than in the past. The extensive stresses in the family can leave fathers feeling depressed, weak, guilty, powerless, isolated, embarrassed, and angry. Fearful that they will lose control or be viewed as weak or ineffectual, however, fathers often hide their feelings and display an outward confidence that may lead others to believe that everything is fine. Fathers worry about what the future holds for their children, their ability to manage the increasing financial burden, and the daily disruptions of the entire family (Davies, Gudmundsdottir, Worden, and others, 2004; Swallow, Macfadyen, Santacroce, and others, 2011). Some fathers escape in their work as a means of dulling the pain. Common coping strategies are problem oriented and include praying, getting information, looking at options, and weighing choices in addition to withdrawal (Mastroyannopoulou, Stallard, Lewis, and others, 1997).
Quality of Life for Children Living with Chronic or Complex Diseases
Perspectives on the Care of Children and Families Living with or Dying from Chronic or Complex Diseases
Scope of the Problem
SPECIALTY
EXAMPLES OF CHRONIC CONDITIONS
Cardiology
Complex congenital heart disease, congestive heart failure, cardiac dysrhythmias, Kawasaki disease, rheumatic fever, hyperlipidemia
Endocrinology
Diabetes, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, Cushing syndrome
Gastroenterology
Short bowel syndrome, biliary atresia, inflammatory bowel disease, hepatitis, cirrhosis, peptic ulcer disease, celiac disease
Hematology
Sickle cell anemia, thalassemia, aplastic anemia, hereditary anemias, hemophilia
Immunology
Immune deficiency, human immunodeficiency virus, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, severe combined immunodeficiency disease
Nephrology
Prune belly syndrome, renal disease
Neurology
Cerebral palsy, ataxia telangiectasia, muscular dystrophy, seizure disorder, spina bifida, traumatic brain injury
Oncology
Brain tumor, leukemia, lymphoma, solid tumors, bone tumors, rare tumors
Pulmonology
Asthma, chronic lung disease, cystic fibrosis, tuberculosis
Rheumatology
Systemic lupus erythematosus, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, dermatomyositis
Trends in Care
Developmental Focus
Family-Centered Care
Family–Health Care Provider Communication
Establishing Therapeutic Relationships
The Role of Culture in Family-Centered Care
Shared Decision Making
Normalization
Managed Care
The Family of the Child with a Chronic or Complex Condition
Impact of the Child’s Chronic Illness
Parents
Parental Roles
Mother–Father Differences
Stay updated, free articles. Join our Telegram channel
Full access? Get Clinical Tree