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J Pain Symptom Manage · Feb 2022
Participatory development of a modular advance care planning program in pediatric palliative care (MAPPS).
- Kathrin Knochel, Vedrana Zaimovic, Birga Gatzweiler, Kerstin K Hein, Nari Heitkamp, Anna Monz, Daniel Reimann, Gian Domenico Borasio, and Monika Führer.
- Center for Pediatric Palliative Care (K.K., V.Z., B.G., K.K.H., N.H., A.M., D.R., M.F.), Dr von Hauner Children's Hospital, University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
- J Pain Symptom Manage. 2022 Feb 1; 63 (2): 189-198.
ContextDecision-making in pediatric palliative care concerns mainly children without decision-making capacity. It has to balance the child's best interests, parental responsibility and the impact on the family system.ObjectivesAdvance care planning (ACP) supports decision making about future medical care. A consistent pediatric approach is still missing. This study aimed at developing a pediatric ACP program (pedACP) meeting specific needs of children, parents and professionals.MethodsBereaved parents of children with life-limiting conditions and professionals involved in pedACP participated. Employing the technique of constellation analysis, they collaboratively assigned content, actors, tools and warning notes about pedACP along a timeline. The researchers analyzed, systematized and translated these results into a pedACP program draft, which was revised by the participants.ResultsThe participants' overall focus was on the children's quality of life and an individualized interdisciplinary communication process along the disease trajectory. The program was conceptualized in modular design with fixed modules at the beginning (to build a trustful relationship and frame the process) and at the end (to summarize results and prepare implementation). The main discussions are structured in flexible modules (About the child, Emergencies, Disease-specific scenarios and End of life care). General themes cover timing, communication, engaging children and structural issues. The participants appreciated the program's comprehensiveness and flexibility.ConclusionParents and professionals combined their perspectives on reflecting goals of care and the complexity of pedACP. They perceived the resulting modular program as suitable for meeting the individual needs of patients, families and professional stakeholders.Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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