解决癌症儿童的教育问题——这是每个人的工作,所以这不是任何人的工作:解释性混合方法评估。

IF 1 4区 医学 Q3 NURSING
Clifton P Thornton, Sydney Henegan, Lisa B Carey, Kim Milla, Katrina Cork, Stacy L Cooper, Lisa A Jacobson, Kathy Ruble, E Juliana Paré-Blagoev
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引用次数: 4

摘要

背景:儿童癌症治疗引起的神经认知缺陷是常见的,长期存在的,并且对生活的多个领域产生负面影响,导致上学和教育方面的挑战。本研究的目的是描述护理人员报告的治疗中神经认知效应的经历,并了解临床医生在美国这一领域的作用。方法:一项对174名癌症儿童照顾者的解释性混合方法研究提供了临床医生如何提供治疗的神经认知效果信息以及他们对学校相关资源的体验。临床医生描述了他们如何提供这些信息,并帮助家庭获得服务或治疗后过渡回学校。结果:护理人员确定医生、护士和社会工作者主要提供有关治疗的神经认知影响的信息。超过一半(55.9%)的家庭在其他地方寻求额外的信息,49.4%的家庭报告这样做是因为他们从团队获得的信息不足。近40%的护理人员报告说,获得学校支持感觉像是一场持续的战斗,超过40%的人没有得到学校提供的在家教育服务。对提供者的定性访谈发现,临床医生关注与治疗相关的身体症状,只有在家庭或儿童返校时才讨论神经认知效果。讨论:当涉及到提供教育或学校相关服务时,临床医生关注身体症状和及时思考,这可能解释了为什么家庭支持很少关于这一主题的教育和重新融入学校的挑战。加强对临床医生的教育,整合跨学科团队和新的临床实践模式可能会改善家庭经验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Addressing Schooling in Children With Cancer-It's Everybody's Job, So It's Nobody's Job: An Explanatory Mixed-Methods Evaluation.

Background: Neurocognitive deficits from childhood cancer treatment are common, long-standing, and negatively impact multiple domains of life leading to challenges with schooling and education. The purpose of this study is to describe caregiver-reported experiences of neurocognitive effects from therapy and to understand the roles clinicians play in this domain in the United States. Methods: An explanatory mixed-methods study of 174 caregivers of children with cancer provided insight into how clinicians provided information on neurocognitive effects of treatment and their experiences with school-related resources. Clinicians provided descriptions of how they provide this information and assist families with accessing services or transition back to school after therapy. Results: Caregivers identified that physicians, nurses, and social workers primarily provide information regarding neurocognitive effects of treatment. Over half (55.9%) of families seek additional information elsewhere and 49.4% report doing so because the information they received from their team was inadequate. Nearly 40% of caregivers report accessing school supports feels like a constant fight and over 40% were not offered homebound educational services by their school. Qualitative interviews with providers found that clinicians focus on therapy-related physical symptoms of treatment and only discuss neurocognitive effects when prompted by families or when children are returning to school. Discussion: Clinicians' focus on physical symptoms and just-in-time thinking when it comes to providing education or school-related services may explain why families endorse infrequent education on the topic and challenges with school reintegration. Improved education for clinicians on this topic, integration of interdisciplinary teams, and new clinical practice models may improve the family experience.

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CiteScore
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