2020
DOI: 10.3310/hsdr08440
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Understanding the health-care experiences of people with sickle cell disorder transitioning from paediatric to adult services: This Sickle Cell Life, a longitudinal qualitative study

Abstract: Background Transitions from paediatric to adult health-care services cause problems worldwide, particularly for young people with long-term conditions. Sickle cell disorder brings particular challenges needing urgent action. Objectives Understand health-care transitions of young people with sickle cell disorder and how these interact with broader transitions to adulthood to improve services and support. … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 129 publications
(302 reference statements)
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“…Participant perspectives may have been influenced by clinic-based education, such as the information sessions on SCD self-management conducted by staff at adult clinic sessions. Similar to our previous study in Ghana with pediatric SCD participants and other reports from elsewhere, issues of peer stigmatization and nondisclosure of health status to friends were frequently revealed 22,27…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Participant perspectives may have been influenced by clinic-based education, such as the information sessions on SCD self-management conducted by staff at adult clinic sessions. Similar to our previous study in Ghana with pediatric SCD participants and other reports from elsewhere, issues of peer stigmatization and nondisclosure of health status to friends were frequently revealed 22,27…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Similar to our previous study in Ghana with pediatric SCD participants and other reports from elsewhere, issues of peer stigmatization and nondisclosure of health status to friends were frequently revealed. 22,27 Limitations of our study include the single site study, convenience sampling method used, modest sample size precluding adjustment for multiple comparisons, and the unequal number of participants in the 2 groups, possibly affecting the ability to generate statistically robust findings. Interviewing participants at the adult clinic may have missed patients who did not successfully transition to adult care, thereby precluding assessment of an influence of transition preparation on improved likelihood for continuity of SCD care from pediatric to adult clinics.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They also had an experience of advocacy for sickle cell healthcare improvement. We have detailed elsewhere the different ways in which we worked together throughout the project, and our flexible approach to collaboration and co-producing knowledge with them (Miles et al, 2020;Miles et al, 2018;Renedo et al, 2020). To summarise: the project was co-produced throughout, with the patient and carer experts involved in the initial funding application process, and participating (with payment) at different stages from planning the research to analysis, dissemination, and translation of the findings into policy and practice.…”
Section: Inequitable Academic Authorshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, the differences in good patient role fulfillment in different care contexts raise questions whether transition programs prepare young adults to navigate multiple, sometimes unpredictable, adult healthcare systems, and whether pediatric care systems provide preparation and opportunities to practice responding when, unfortunately and often unfairly, care challenges arise. 33,34 for in a relatively unique care setting, patients were average by many standardized measures, including SCD impact, stigma, and self-efficacy scores, 15 SCSES scores, 13 and mean MoSCS scores. 14 Finally, young adults with SCD's intersectional identities are incompletely addressed here.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%