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- Jennifer Engler, Dania Gruber, Fabian Engler, Michaela Hach, Hannah Seipp, Katrin Kuss, Ferdinand M Gerlach, Lisa-R Ulrich, and Antje Erler.
- Institute of General Practice, Goethe-University Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
- J Palliat Med. 2020 Apr 1; 23 (4): 466-474.
Abstract Background: Guidelines on pediatric palliative care recommend to provide care for children and adolescents with life-limiting conditions at home. Since 2007, in Germany, palliative home care can be provided by specialized outpatient palliative care teams. However, teams with specific expertise for children are not available all over the country. Families without this support need to use the hospital to get specialists' assistance. Objective: To explore how parents of children and adolescents with life-limiting conditions think about the hospital as place of care. Design: We conducted narrative interviews with parents and analyzed these by using a grounded theory approach. Setting/Subjects: We interviewed 13 parents (4 fathers and 9 mothers) of 9 children with life-limiting conditions receiving or having received pediatric specialized outpatient palliative care (SOPPC) in Germany. Results: Parents reported feelings of vulnerability, heteronomy, and disablement associated with hospital care and were afraid that their children's needs were not adequately addressed. These perceptions resulted from hospitals' standardized care structures and over- and undertreatment, a lack of continuity of care, hospital pathogens, a lack of a palliative mindset, insensitive hospital staff, the exclusion of parents from the treatment and parental care of their children, the hospital stay as a permanent state of emergency, and a waste of limited life time. Conclusion: Pediatric hospital staff needs training in identifying and responding to palliative care needs. SOPPC structures should be expanded all over Germany to meet the needs of families of children with life-limiting conditions.
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