Title: Family-Centered Care: From bench to bedside and back
1Family-Centered Care From bench to bedside and
back
Sophia Childrens Hospital
- Jos M. Latour RN, PhD
- Nurse Scientist
2Disclosure
- No financial interest and
- no conflict of interest to declare
- Jos M. Latour
- 23 October 2012
3Route to Knowledge
- Bench-to-Bedside
- Basic research first, but then adding clinical
experience to - bring ideas to patients
- Bedside-to-Bench
- nurse/physician-scientists' spending time
primarily in the - clinic but seek to do science
- Bench/Bedside to Bedside/Bench
- Few come from both ways aiming for a specific
research niche
Kreeger. From Bench to Bedside. Nature
20034241090-1091
4History Family-Centered Care
- Developed after World War II
- Changing social expectations for the care
delivery - Originate from US and UK
- Research right time - right place
- Social readiness for change
Jolley and Shields. The evolution of
family-centered care. J Pediatr Nurs
200924164-170
5History Family-Centered Care
- Patient-Centered Care versus Family-Centered Care
- Which came first, the chicken or the egg?
6Family-Centered Care
- Aims for Quality Improvement
- 1. Safety
- 2. Effectiveness
- 3. Patient-Centred Care
- 4. Timeless
- 5. Efficiency
- 6. Equity
Committee on Quality of Health Care in America,
2001 Crossing the Quality Chasm A new health
system for the 21st century
7Family-Centered Care
- Definition
- The professional support of the child and family
through a - process of involvement, participation, and
partnership, - underpinned by empowerment and negotiation Smith
et al. 2002 - Patient- and family-centered care is an approach
to the - planning, delivery, and evaluation of health care
that is - grounded in mutually beneficial partnerships
among health - care providers, patients, and families. It
redefines the - relationships in health care.
- Institute for Patient- and Family-Centered Care,
www.ipfcc.org
8Bench / Bedside
- Principles of family-centered care are well-known
- but not consistently implemented into daily
practice
Latour. Is family-centred care in critical care
units that difficult? A view from Europe. Nurs
Crit Care 20051051-3
What is family? Needs-experiences as outcome
variable Minimal focus on satisfaction (and
limitations)
Latour and Haines. Families in ICU Do we truly
consider their needs, experiences and
satisfaction? Nurs Crit Care 200712173-4
9Bench / Bedside
- Work across health care departments
- Bodenheimer et al. Patient self-management of
chronic disease in primary care. JAMA
20022882469-2475 - Boudreaux et al. Family presence during invasive
procedures and resuscitations in the emergency
department A critical review and suggestions for
future research. Ann Emerg Med 200240193-205 - Richter et al. Listening to the voices of
hospitalized high-risk antepartum patient. J
Obstetr Gynecol Neonat Nurs 200736313-318 - DiGioia et al. Patient and family-centered
collaborative care An - orthopaedic model. Clin Orthop Related Res
200746313-29
10Family-Centered Care
Crit Care Med 2007 35605-622
- Objective To develop clinical practice
guidelines for support of patient and family in
adult, pediatric, or neonatal patient-centered ICU
11Family-Centered Care
- Decision-making
- Family Coping
- Staff stress related to family interaction
- Cultural support of family
- Spiritual and religious support
- Family visitation
- Family environment of care
- Family presence on rounds
- Family presence at resuscitation
- Palliative care
43 recommendations
Davidson et al. Crit Care Med 2007
12Families in European NICUs
n9
n9
n35
n10
n10
n45
n22
n35
Greisen G et al. Parents, siblings and
grandparents in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
A survey of policies in eight European countries.
Act Paediatrica 2009991744-1750
13Parents during Rounds
- FACTS and MYTHS influencing Round Policies
- ICU design single rooms vs multiple bedded rooms
- Length of time presence has no effect on time
- Privacy Patients and ICU professionals
- Teaching Reduced teaching time
14Presence (Aronson et al. Pediatrics 2009)
98 parents
15Family during Resuscitation
Erfahrungen deutschsprachiger Intensive- und
Anästhesiepflegekräfte mit der Angehörigenanwesenh
eit während der kardiopulmonalen Reanimation.
Stefan Köberich. intensiv 200715294-298.
16European Position Statement
Fulbrook P, Latour JM, Albarran JW et al Nursing
in Critical Care 200712250-252 Eur J Cardiovasc
Nurs 20076255-258 Infant 2008444-45 Paediatri
c Nursing 20082034-36
17(No Transcript)
18EURYDICE II Study
- Data collection November 2009 to April 2010
- 409 consecutive children died in 45 PICUs
- (N/W Europe, n351 C/E Europe, n58)
- Overall median mortality rate was 4.3 (range
1-11.2)
Devictor DJ, Latour JM, and the EURYDICE II study
Group. Forgoing Life Support How the decision is
made in European pediatric intensive care units.
Intensive Care Medicine 2011371881-1887
19EURYDICE II Study
- 86 cases a staff meeting was organized to make
the decision - Physicians were the primary decision makers in
all groups, with little involvement of the
parents in the final decision
Devictor DJ, Latour JM, and the EURYDICE II study
Group. Forgoing Life Support How the decision is
made in European pediatric intensive care units.
Intensive Care Medicine 2011371881-1887
20Decision Making process
Caring and Sharing by Nurses
Familys autonomy
Family make the decision
Family and physicians share the decision
Rol nurses
Physicians make the decision
No decision is made
Doctors autonomy
Devictor D, Latour JM, Tissières P. Forgoing Life
Sustaining or Death Prolonging Therapy in the
PICU. Ped Clin North Am 200855(3)791-804
21Bedside / Bench
- Patient/Family satisfaction
- Politics
- Health care insurance
- Patient organisations
- Hospital management
- Medical/Nursing professions
Patient Family Satisfaction Quality Performanc
e Indicator
22Latour et al. Parent satisfaction in the
pediatric intensive care Pediatr Clin N Am
200855779-790
23The EMPATHIC Study
- Multi-center, descriptive, cross-sectional,
- psychometric, prospective cohort study to
develop, - test, and implement a parent satisfaction
instrument - EMPATHIC EMpowerment of PArents in THe
Intensive Care
24Explorations
Latour et al. A qualitative study exploring the
experiences of parents of children admitted to
seven Dutch pediatric intensive care units.
Intensive Care Med 201137319-325
25Cohesion PICU
- Parents vs Healthcare Professionals
Latour et al. Differences in perceptions of
parent and healthcare professionals on pediatric
intensive care practices. Ped Crit Care Med
201112e211-e215
26Cohesion NICU
Latour et al. Perceptions of parents, nurses, and
physicians on neonatal intensive care practices.
J Pediatr 2010157215-220
27EMPATHIC Questionnaire (65 items)
Latour et al. Construction and psychometric
testing of the EMPATHIC questionnaire measuring
parent satisfaction in the pediatric intensive
care unit. Intensive Care Med 201137310-318
28EMPATHIC N Questionnaire (57 items)
Latour et al. Development and validation of a
neonatal intensive care parent satisfaction
instrument. Pediatr Crit Care Med 201213554-559
29Outcome
- High ratings given to satisfaction items
- But items below our established standard
- Daily consultation with physician
- Discharge planning
- Noise levels and IC-bed space
- Involvement in decision-making on care and
treatment - Differences in information provision by nurses
and physicians - Assigning a primary nurse
30Latour JM. Empowerment of parents in the
intensive care. 2011
31Summary
- Bench needed
- but with input from the bedside
- Individual patient and family care
- but with knowledge of their needs
- Training of intellectual intelligence
- but also social intelligence - empathy
32- Thank You
- Jos Latour
- j.latour_at_erasmusmc.nl
- Free download thesis
- http//repub.eur.nl/res/aut/17863/