Purpose
Children with chronic illnesses are living longer, prompting health
care provider attention to the transition from pediatric to adult care.
Transition of care is successful when youth are independent in managing
their health. The aims of this study were to identify the strengths and
barriers to transition from pediatric to adult care and to determine
strategies that could enhance the transition process.
Methods
A survey was administered via a structured interview to 33 young
adult participants (19 to 27 years of age), living with Chronic
Granulomatous Disease (CGD) all of whom transitioned from pediatric to adult
care. The participants were predominately male (88%) and Caucasian
(73%). Topics covered in the survey included understanding of
disease and treatment, adherence, advance care planning, and barriers to
transition. Data was analyzed using a conventional content analysis
approach.
Results
Seventy-six percent of the participants did not understand their
disease process and only fifty percent understood their prophylactic
medication regimen. Seventy-five percent of participants perceived their
transition as uneventful. Ninety-four percent were independent in
self-management skills such as making appointments and ninety percent in
refilling prescriptions. More than half of the participants thought that the
transition process needed improvement. Specific suggestions to create a
practical approach to transition were offered.
Conclusions
Gaps in disease-related knowledge and transition planning were
identified by adolescents and young adults living with CGD. The findings
suggest the need for enhancing the transition process utilizing
interdisciplinary collaboration to develop a transition policy and
program.
Despite the increasing trend of travel for medical purposes, little is known about the experience of parents and other caregivers who come to the United States specifically to obtain medical treatment for their seriously ill child. In this exploratory, descriptive qualitative study, we used a semi-structured narrative guide to conduct in-depth interviews with 22 Spanish or English-speaking caregivers about the challenges encountered and adaptation required when entering a new medical and cultural environment. Caregivers identified the language barrier and transnational parenting as challenges while reporting hospital staff and their own families as major sources of support. Using the results of the study as a guide, clinical and program implications are provided and recommendations for social work practice discussed.
Impoverished caregivers of children with frequent asthma emergency department visits describe stress that is multifaceted, overwhelming, and difficult to eradicate. Their experiences underscore the need for improved school-based asthma management and family-centered approaches to health care delivery.
The purpose of this study was to examine relationships among caregiver social support, caregiver depressive symptoms, medication adherence, and asthma control in a sample of low-income, urban, Black children aged 3-12 years with uncontrolled asthma and their caregivers. Using longitudinal data from a randomized controlled trial (RCT) assessing the efficacy of an environmental control educational intervention, we used generalized estimating equations and ordered logistic regression models to evaluate the relationship between caregiver social support (Medical Outcomes Study Social Support Survey), depressive symptoms (Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale), and two child asthma outcomes: (a) medication adherence (Asthma Medication Ratio) and (b) asthma control. At baseline, 45.7% of the 208 children had very poorly controlled asthma. Nearly a third of caregivers (97% female) had clinically significant depressive symptoms at each data collection point. Social support was not associated with either asthma outcome nor did it moderate the relationship between depressive symptoms and child asthma outcomes. Higher caregiver depressive symptoms predicted decreased medication adherence (b=−0.003, SE 0.002). Moderate asthma at baseline (OR: 0.305, SE: 0.251), severe asthma at baseline (OR: 0.142, SE: 0.299), household income < $20,000 per year (OR: 0.505, SE: 0.333), and fall season (OR: 0.643, SE: 0.215) were associated with poorer asthma control. Attending to the social context of low-income, urban, Black children with asthma is critical to reduce asthma morbidity. Maternal depressive symptoms are modifiable and should be targeted in interventions to improve child asthma outcomes in this vulnerable population. The RCT was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01981564) in October 2013.
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