Background The aim of this study was to identify similarities and diferences in the unmet supportive care needs(USCN)of families of children with major chronic health conditions(CHCs)using a universal need assessment ...Background The aim of this study was to identify similarities and diferences in the unmet supportive care needs(USCN)of families of children with major chronic health conditions(CHCs)using a universal need assessment tool.Methods A cross-sectional online survey involving parents of children with congenital heart disease(CHD),type 1 diabetes mellitus(T1D),cancer,and asthma diagnosed within the last 5 years recruited via social media and support organizations.Thirty-four items assessing the USCN across six domains(care needs,physical and social needs,informational needs,support needs,fnancial needs,child-related emotional needs)were responded to on a 4-point Likert scale[no need(1)to high need(4)].Descriptive statistics identifed the level of need,and linear regressions identifed factors associated with higher need domain scores.Due to small numbers,the asthma group was excluded from comparisons across CHCs.Results One hundred and ninety-four parents completed the survey(CHD:n=97,T1D:n=50,cancer:n=39,and asthma:n=8).Parents of children with cancer were most likely to report at least one USCN(92%),followed by parents of children with T1D(62%).The fve most commonly reported USCN across CHCs were drawn from four domains:child-related emotional,support,care,and fnancial.Three need items were included in the top fve needs for all conditions.A higher USCN was associated with a greater frequency of hospital visits and the absence of parental support.Conclusions Using a universal need assessment tool,this is one of the frst studies to characterize USCN in families of children diagnosed with common CHCs.While proportions endorsing diferent needs varied across conditions,the most endorsed needs were similar across the illness groups.This suggests that support programs or services could be shared across diferent CHCs.展开更多
基金Open access funding is enabled and organized by CAUL and its Member Institutionsfunded by a Deakin University PhD Scholarship.
文摘Background The aim of this study was to identify similarities and diferences in the unmet supportive care needs(USCN)of families of children with major chronic health conditions(CHCs)using a universal need assessment tool.Methods A cross-sectional online survey involving parents of children with congenital heart disease(CHD),type 1 diabetes mellitus(T1D),cancer,and asthma diagnosed within the last 5 years recruited via social media and support organizations.Thirty-four items assessing the USCN across six domains(care needs,physical and social needs,informational needs,support needs,fnancial needs,child-related emotional needs)were responded to on a 4-point Likert scale[no need(1)to high need(4)].Descriptive statistics identifed the level of need,and linear regressions identifed factors associated with higher need domain scores.Due to small numbers,the asthma group was excluded from comparisons across CHCs.Results One hundred and ninety-four parents completed the survey(CHD:n=97,T1D:n=50,cancer:n=39,and asthma:n=8).Parents of children with cancer were most likely to report at least one USCN(92%),followed by parents of children with T1D(62%).The fve most commonly reported USCN across CHCs were drawn from four domains:child-related emotional,support,care,and fnancial.Three need items were included in the top fve needs for all conditions.A higher USCN was associated with a greater frequency of hospital visits and the absence of parental support.Conclusions Using a universal need assessment tool,this is one of the frst studies to characterize USCN in families of children diagnosed with common CHCs.While proportions endorsing diferent needs varied across conditions,the most endorsed needs were similar across the illness groups.This suggests that support programs or services could be shared across diferent CHCs.