2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2022.02.008
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Parent Health-Related Quality of Life for Infants with Congenital Anomalies Receiving Neonatal Intensive Care

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Cited by 10 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Studies that have explored parents' quality of life following their child's congenital diagnosis show that a postnatal diagnosis, a child requiring a medical device such as a gastrostomy tube, earlier gestational age, consultation from multiple specialists, multiple or longer hospital stays, and/or a nonsurgical anomaly are all associated with lower parental quality of life. 8,29 Under our first qualitative category, parenting mindset, we found that both mothers who received a prenatal and mothers who received a postnatal congenital diagnosis attempted to maintain a positive outlook through utilizing religious teachings, symbols, or practices, as well as family supports. These findings align with prior studies, which have found that religiosity and/or spirituality are key dimensions that provide guidance during parents' decision making, offer parents psychological support during the decision-making process, and/or provide a source of meaning, purpose, and connectedness during the decision-making experience.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Studies that have explored parents' quality of life following their child's congenital diagnosis show that a postnatal diagnosis, a child requiring a medical device such as a gastrostomy tube, earlier gestational age, consultation from multiple specialists, multiple or longer hospital stays, and/or a nonsurgical anomaly are all associated with lower parental quality of life. 8,29 Under our first qualitative category, parenting mindset, we found that both mothers who received a prenatal and mothers who received a postnatal congenital diagnosis attempted to maintain a positive outlook through utilizing religious teachings, symbols, or practices, as well as family supports. These findings align with prior studies, which have found that religiosity and/or spirituality are key dimensions that provide guidance during parents' decision making, offer parents psychological support during the decision-making process, and/or provide a source of meaning, purpose, and connectedness during the decision-making experience.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is also possible that mothers made these decisions with their own quality of life in mind. Studies that have explored parents' quality of life following their child's congenital diagnosis show that a postnatal diagnosis, a child requiring a medical device such as a gastrostomy tube, earlier gestational age, consultation from multiple specialists, multiple or longer hospital stays, and/or a nonsurgical anomaly are all associated with lower parental quality of life 8,29…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…9 Consequently, parents and other caregivers are often confounded by the complexity of care, and may fail to recall and comply with medical advice. 10,11 Acharya et al, demonstrated an inverse relationship between the number of follow-up visits in various clinics to the family's quality of life, as well as how the complexity of care inversely affects health-related quality of life (HRQL) of the infant and caregiver. 11 In Israel, preventive and well-care visits for children up to 6 years of age are provided in dedicated well care clinics (Family Care Centers, FCC), known in Hebrew as Tipat Halav (literally, a drop of milk) 12 and are separate from Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs), which provide the remainder of general pediatric care.…”
Section: Accepted Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…McAndrew et al noted less improvement in HRQL after discharge for parents of term NICU infants than premature NICU infants [9,22]. Krick et al's study of NICU parents described 3 phases of uncertainty as parents adapt to uncertainty, 1.…”
Section: Parents Experience Heterogeneous Levels Of Uncertaintymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When the team was able to focus on what was known, rather than broad uncertainties, adaptation improved for all families. Reducible uncertainties are crucial to target especially for parents of medically complex infants requiring multiple subspecialists as they are at risk for higher levels of uncertainty [22,27] Providers should target parent uncertainty early as higher levels of uncertainty during and after NICU admission have been associated with an increased risk for perinatal post-traumatic stress disorder [28].…”
Section: Parents Experience Heterogeneous Levels Of Uncertaintymentioning
confidence: 99%