Karen J. Low, GenROC Consortium, Georgia Treneman-Evans, Sarah L. Wynn, Jenny Ingram
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Data were analysed following the principles of thematic analysis.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Results</h3>\n \n <p>We identified five themes. (1) <i>Impact on the family around a genetic diagnosis</i>: Distress begins well before a diagnosis is received; there is an impact upon the receipt itself and the ongoing impact on the family thereafter. (2) <i>Impact of uncertainty, lack of data and ‘rareness’</i>. The experience of parenting when so little is known about your child's condition. (3) <i>Relationships with health professionals</i>. Positive where parents are empowered and feel part of the team; negative where parents feel not heard/believed due to a professional lack of expertise/understanding. (4) <i>Parent mental health</i>: GNDs can be a significant burden to family life. The need to advocate for services has a negative impact. Feelings of isolation through rareness. (5) <i>Coping strategies and factors that help</i>: Support/Facebook groups are considered highly beneficial. Parents develop new positive identities, including that of advocate, professional and educator.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Conclusions</h3>\n \n <p>GNDs represent a major challenge for families, clinicians and service providers. Distressed parents are struggling to cope with challenges and suffer from poor mental health. Psychosocial support, better signposting and health professional education may help.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Patient Contribution</h3>\n \n <p>Patient Participant Involvement group (comprising five mothers and one father of children with varying GNDs, one young person with a GND, and one genetics family charity representative) contributed to topic guide development and methodology and provided feedback on results.</p>\n </section>\n </div>","PeriodicalId":55070,"journal":{"name":"Health Expectations","volume":"28 4","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-07-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/hex.70340","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Identifying the Impacts, Obstacles and Information Barriers for Parents of Children Living With Genetic Neurodevelopmental Disorders: A Qualitative Study\",\"authors\":\"Karen J. 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Data were analysed following the principles of thematic analysis.</p>\\n </section>\\n \\n <section>\\n \\n <h3> Results</h3>\\n \\n <p>We identified five themes. (1) <i>Impact on the family around a genetic diagnosis</i>: Distress begins well before a diagnosis is received; there is an impact upon the receipt itself and the ongoing impact on the family thereafter. (2) <i>Impact of uncertainty, lack of data and ‘rareness’</i>. The experience of parenting when so little is known about your child's condition. (3) <i>Relationships with health professionals</i>. Positive where parents are empowered and feel part of the team; negative where parents feel not heard/believed due to a professional lack of expertise/understanding. (4) <i>Parent mental health</i>: GNDs can be a significant burden to family life. The need to advocate for services has a negative impact. Feelings of isolation through rareness. 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Identifying the Impacts, Obstacles and Information Barriers for Parents of Children Living With Genetic Neurodevelopmental Disorders: A Qualitative Study
Background
A genetic neurodevelopmental disorder (GND) impacts all aspects of a child's and family's life. GNDs are rare; most have limited natural history data. We aimed to understand the impacts, obstacles, information barriers and coping strategies developed through parents' experience of receiving and living with a child's diagnosis.
Design and Participants
This analysis is part of the UK multicentre observational study of children with rare GNDs (GenROC). We conducted 17 semi-structured online interviews with parents of children with GNDs (aged 0–15 years) from November 2023 to March 2024. Data were analysed following the principles of thematic analysis.
Results
We identified five themes. (1) Impact on the family around a genetic diagnosis: Distress begins well before a diagnosis is received; there is an impact upon the receipt itself and the ongoing impact on the family thereafter. (2) Impact of uncertainty, lack of data and ‘rareness’. The experience of parenting when so little is known about your child's condition. (3) Relationships with health professionals. Positive where parents are empowered and feel part of the team; negative where parents feel not heard/believed due to a professional lack of expertise/understanding. (4) Parent mental health: GNDs can be a significant burden to family life. The need to advocate for services has a negative impact. Feelings of isolation through rareness. (5) Coping strategies and factors that help: Support/Facebook groups are considered highly beneficial. Parents develop new positive identities, including that of advocate, professional and educator.
Conclusions
GNDs represent a major challenge for families, clinicians and service providers. Distressed parents are struggling to cope with challenges and suffer from poor mental health. Psychosocial support, better signposting and health professional education may help.
Patient Contribution
Patient Participant Involvement group (comprising five mothers and one father of children with varying GNDs, one young person with a GND, and one genetics family charity representative) contributed to topic guide development and methodology and provided feedback on results.
期刊介绍:
Health Expectations promotes critical thinking and informed debate about all aspects of patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in health and social care, health policy and health services research including:
• Person-centred care and quality improvement
• Patients'' participation in decisions about disease prevention and management
• Public perceptions of health services
• Citizen involvement in health care policy making and priority-setting
• Methods for monitoring and evaluating participation
• Empowerment and consumerism
• Patients'' role in safety and quality
• Patient and public role in health services research
• Co-production (researchers working with patients and the public) of research, health care and policy
Health Expectations is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal publishing original research, review articles and critical commentaries. It includes papers which clarify concepts, develop theories, and critically analyse and evaluate specific policies and practices. The Journal provides an inter-disciplinary and international forum in which researchers (including PPIE researchers) from a range of backgrounds and expertise can present their work to other researchers, policy-makers, health care professionals, managers, patients and consumer advocates.