Assessment of Parent Understanding in Conferences for Critically Ill Neonates
Overview
Nursing
Authors
Affiliations
Objectives: This study aimed to characterize the use and impact of assessments of understanding in parent-clinician communication for critically ill infants.
Methods: We enrolled parents and clinicians participating in family conferences for infants with neurologic conditions. Family conferences were audio recorded as they occurred. We used a directed content analysis approach to identify clinician assessments of understanding and parent responses to those assessments. Assessments were classified based on an adapted framework; responses were characterized as "absent," "yes/no," or "elaborated."
Results: Fifty conferences involving the care of 25 infants were analyzed; these contained 374 distinct assessments of understanding. Most (n = 209/374, 56%) assessments were partial (i.e. okay?); a minority (n = 60/374, 16%) were open-ended. When clinicians asked open-ended questions, parents elaborated in their answers most of the time (n = 55/60, 92%). Approximately three-quarter of partial assessments yielded no verbal response from parents. No conferences included a teach-back.
Conclusions: Although common, most clinician assessments of understanding were partial or close-ended and rarely resulted in elaborated responses from parents. Open-ended assessments are an effective, underutilized strategy to increase parent engagement and clinician awareness of information needs.
Practice Implications: Clinicians hoping to facilitate parent engagement and question-asking should rely on open-ended statements to assess understanding.
Seminars in Fetal & neonatal medicine: Palliative and end of life care in the NICU.
Peralta D, Bogetz J, Lemmon M Semin Fetal Neonatal Med. 2023; 28(3):101457.
PMID: 37230860 PMC: 10827319. DOI: 10.1016/j.siny.2023.101457.