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Strategies for feeling secure influence parents' participation in care

Author

Summary, in English

This study investigates what makes parents of hospitalized children feel secure and factors influencing their level of participation. It also studies, whether the degree to which parents participate affects their child's pain and sleep during hospitalization. Questionnaires were distributed to a series of parents whose children were discharged from two paediatric surgical wards and one paediatric medical-surgical ward at two university hospitals in Sweden. Parental security is almost equally distributed among three given alternatives: security derived from trusting that professionals know how to take care of the child; security derived from having control over what is happening to the child; and security derived from being the one who knows the child best. Depending upon the strategy chosen, parents want to participate at different levels in their child's care. The results indicate a relationship between parental participation and their estimation of their child's pain. The study confirms a pattern, developed in a previous study, in how parents adopt different strategies affecting their participation during their child's hospitalization. Some parents who wanted to participate in more aspects of their child's care seemed to think that their child had less pain than parents who preferred more limited participation.

Publishing year

1999

Language

English

Pages

586-592

Publication/Series

Journal of Clinical Nursing

Volume

8

Issue

5

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Topic

  • Nursing

Keywords

  • security
  • parental participation
  • pain
  • children

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1365-2702