“他没有在听我说话”:父母在儿科急诊科的沟通、包容和边缘化经历。

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q1 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Academic Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-06 DOI:10.1111/acem.15091
Colleen K Gutman, Antionette McFarlane, Rosemarie Fernandez, K Casey Lion, Paul L Aronson, Carma L Bylund, Nancy Joseph, Maria L Mecias, Carla L Fisher
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:儿科急诊科(ED)护理的不公平可能受到临床医生沟通差异的影响。我们试图从边缘化种族和民族背景的父母的角度来研究,在儿科急诊科就诊时,临床医生与父母的沟通是如何表征的。方法:我们对来自边缘种族和民族背景的儿科急诊科患者的父母进行了深入的半结构化个人访谈并进行了分析。我们采用恒定的比较方法进行主题分析,并根据扎根理论进行分析。为了确保准确性,我们同时收集和分析数据。在分析过程中,我们使用以患者为中心的沟通(PCC)框架和公共卫生关键种族实践的10条原则作为致敏结构。两名编码员遵循了几个分析步骤:(1)开放编码以发现概念,(2)将概念分组为主题,(3)轴向编码以识别主题属性,(4)识别范例摘录以进行丰富的描述。主题的饱和是基于重复、再现和有力。结果:共有19名家长参与。父母描述了三种临床医生沟通行为,这些行为促进了他们的包容感或边缘化感:信息交流、移情沟通和伙伴关系的建立。家长也强调主动沟通对促进孩子融入的重要性。很少有参与者描述在他们孩子的急诊科就诊期间经历过种族主义,但许多人在之前的医疗护理中遇到过,他们将其与他们目前的经历联系起来。特别是,家长们描述了他们使用主动沟通的动机是如何受到他们过去在医疗遭遇中遭遇种族主义的经历的激励。结论:这些叙述表明,过去和现在经历的种族主义可能会告诉父母如何接受和应对PCC的差距。适应种族意识观点的以传播为重点的干预措施可能在促进卫生公平方面发挥作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"He was not listening to hear me": Parent experiences with communication, inclusion, and marginalization in the pediatric emergency department.

Objective: Inequities in pediatric emergency department (ED) care may be influenced by disparities in clinician communication. We sought to examine, from the perspective of parents from marginalized racial and ethnic backgrounds, how clinician-parent communication is characterized during pediatric ED visits.

Methods: We conducted and analyzed in-depth semistructured individual interviews with parents of pediatric ED patients from marginalized racial and ethnic backgrounds. We applied a constant comparative method approach to conduct a thematic analysis informed by grounded theory. To ensure rigor, we collected and analyzed data concurrently. We used the patient-centered communication (PCC) framework and the 10 principles of Public Health Critical Race Praxis as sensitizing constructs during analysis. Two coders followed several analytical steps: (1) open coding for concept discovery, (2) grouping concepts into themes, (3) axial coding to identify thematic properties, and (4) identification of exemplar excerpts for rich description. Thematic saturation was based on repetition, recurrence, and forcefulness.

Results: Nineteen parents participated. Parents described three clinician communicative behaviors that facilitated their sense of inclusion or marginalization: information exchange, empathic communication, and partnership-building. Parents also stressed the importance of their own proactive communication in facilitating their inclusion. Few participants described experiencing racism during their child's ED visit, yet many did during prior health care encounters, which they connected to their current experience. In particular, parents described how their use of proactive communication was motivated by their past experiences of racism in medical encounters.

Conclusions: These narratives demonstrate ways in which experienced racism, both past and present, may inform how parents receive and respond to gaps in PCC. Communication focused interventions that adapt a race-conscious perspective may have a role in promoting health equity.

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来源期刊
Academic Emergency Medicine
Academic Emergency Medicine 医学-急救医学
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
6.80%
发文量
207
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Academic Emergency Medicine (AEM) is the official monthly publication of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) and publishes information relevant to the practice, educational advancements, and investigation of emergency medicine. It is the second-largest peer-reviewed scientific journal in the specialty of emergency medicine. The goal of AEM is to advance the science, education, and clinical practice of emergency medicine, to serve as a voice for the academic emergency medicine community, and to promote SAEM''s goals and objectives. Members and non-members worldwide depend on this journal for translational medicine relevant to emergency medicine, as well as for clinical news, case studies and more. Each issue contains information relevant to the research, educational advancements, and practice in emergency medicine. Subject matter is diverse, including preclinical studies, clinical topics, health policy, and educational methods. The research of SAEM members contributes significantly to the scientific content and development of the journal.
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