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The development of a communication tool to aid parent-centered communication between parents and healthcare professionals: a quality improvement project

The development of a communication tool to aid parent-centered communication between parents and healthcare professionals: a quality improvement project
The development of a communication tool to aid parent-centered communication between parents and healthcare professionals: a quality improvement project
Good communication is central to good healthcare. As a result of poor communication between parents and healthcare professionals (HCPs) in clinical settings, this study aimed to address this problem by developing a communication tool to empower parents and act as a prompt for HCPs to talk about the child’s care and gather information at the point of admission to hospital about what is important to families, therefore supporting patient-centered communication. A design thinking process was used to develop a physical copy of Chloe’s card and evaluate its use. Design thinking is a problem-solving approach, which uses an empathetic lens to integrate viewpoints of different stakeholders throughout the process of creating solutions. Design thinking involves five processes: (1) empathise—including a literature review and data synthesis, (2) define—by completing semi-structured interviews with parents about their experience of communication and HCPs perceptions of parent’s experience of communication, (3) ideate—iterate the design of Chloe’s card with parents and HCPs, (4) prototype—develop the design of Chloe’s card, and (5) test—pilot test in clinical practice. Results from this initial study suggest that a small hand-held card, with emoticons and a place to write concerns, was acceptable to parents and feasible to use in clinical practice. Parents do not always feel heard by HCPs and a tool such as Chloe’s card may help facilitate sharing of information about matters important to them and their child. However, some HCPs felt the need for a communication tool undermined their clinical skills. Feedback from HCP participants suggests that the idea of Chloe’s card was acceptable and perceived as potentially being useful in clinical practice. Further work is required, as part of a larger study, to further refine this communication tool, identify those parents who would benefit most from Chloe’s card, as well as to further refine the HCP process prior to implementing it into clinical settings. It was noted future iterations would benefit from a digital version linked with a child’s electronic record, as well as multi-language versions and information for parents.
children, communication, complex medical needs, family centered care, shared decision making
2227-9032
Marino, Luise V.
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Collaḉo, Nicole
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Coyne, Sophie
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Leppan, Megan
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Ridgeway, Steve
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Bharucha, Tara
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Cochrane, Colette
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Fandinga, Catarina
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Palframan, Karla
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Rees, Leanne
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Osman, Ahmed
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Johnson, Mark J.
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Hurley-Wallace, Anna
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Darlington, Anne-Sophie E.
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Marino, Luise V.
7e7ac340-1cb9-4363-8bad-b2c70fbb1d56
Collaḉo, Nicole
d7a41227-8aa4-4bbb-a380-980824736945
Coyne, Sophie
eced85f4-a4b5-4649-ab7d-d95c3858f306
Leppan, Megan
fc88c0f7-f522-4bee-9450-c9b653e36a33
Ridgeway, Steve
be46e39b-d534-44ab-b527-6087800ce28e
Bharucha, Tara
04329825-30d1-4cac-817b-c1f1133630f7
Cochrane, Colette
5b50299a-1778-478d-9ae6-90d6c47f0017
Fandinga, Catarina
b7fcf01d-2cd0-4f65-b931-07e7510bd9b6
Palframan, Karla
afc10dd8-e229-4802-9b71-27e3bcf213f0
Rees, Leanne
42c1bcbe-6ad7-466b-a98a-27b51f5e6f84
Osman, Ahmed
115240f3-f543-4b60-8639-75ef460752fa
Johnson, Mark J.
73d4aba1-fa5e-4b29-870e-e8f5d40ec8cb
Hurley-Wallace, Anna
7942e783-3a78-4fd2-8794-ac62ccf96d84
Darlington, Anne-Sophie E.
472fcfc9-160b-4344-8113-8dd8760ff962

Marino, Luise V., Collaḉo, Nicole, Coyne, Sophie, Leppan, Megan, Ridgeway, Steve, Bharucha, Tara, Cochrane, Colette, Fandinga, Catarina, Palframan, Karla, Rees, Leanne, Osman, Ahmed, Johnson, Mark J., Hurley-Wallace, Anna and Darlington, Anne-Sophie E. (2023) The development of a communication tool to aid parent-centered communication between parents and healthcare professionals: a quality improvement project. Healthcare, 11 (20), [2706]. (doi:10.3390/healthcare11202706).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Good communication is central to good healthcare. As a result of poor communication between parents and healthcare professionals (HCPs) in clinical settings, this study aimed to address this problem by developing a communication tool to empower parents and act as a prompt for HCPs to talk about the child’s care and gather information at the point of admission to hospital about what is important to families, therefore supporting patient-centered communication. A design thinking process was used to develop a physical copy of Chloe’s card and evaluate its use. Design thinking is a problem-solving approach, which uses an empathetic lens to integrate viewpoints of different stakeholders throughout the process of creating solutions. Design thinking involves five processes: (1) empathise—including a literature review and data synthesis, (2) define—by completing semi-structured interviews with parents about their experience of communication and HCPs perceptions of parent’s experience of communication, (3) ideate—iterate the design of Chloe’s card with parents and HCPs, (4) prototype—develop the design of Chloe’s card, and (5) test—pilot test in clinical practice. Results from this initial study suggest that a small hand-held card, with emoticons and a place to write concerns, was acceptable to parents and feasible to use in clinical practice. Parents do not always feel heard by HCPs and a tool such as Chloe’s card may help facilitate sharing of information about matters important to them and their child. However, some HCPs felt the need for a communication tool undermined their clinical skills. Feedback from HCP participants suggests that the idea of Chloe’s card was acceptable and perceived as potentially being useful in clinical practice. Further work is required, as part of a larger study, to further refine this communication tool, identify those parents who would benefit most from Chloe’s card, as well as to further refine the HCP process prior to implementing it into clinical settings. It was noted future iterations would benefit from a digital version linked with a child’s electronic record, as well as multi-language versions and information for parents.

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Chloe's card - quality improvement project paper v15 clean 4.10.23 - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 8 October 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 October 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: This report is independent research arising from a Thames Valley Wessex Congenital Heart Disease Network research grant and University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust Small Grants GRT0684. Luise V. Marino also is the recipient of a Research Leaders Programme award, Southampton Academy of Research, UHS.
Keywords: children, communication, complex medical needs, family centered care, shared decision making

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483272
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483272
ISSN: 2227-9032
PURE UUID: bb4a1d7e-1706-43bb-8af5-17939ec51cc5
ORCID for Nicole Collaḉo: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1398-9105
ORCID for Anna Hurley-Wallace: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8790-1247

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 27 Oct 2023 16:32
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 02:08

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Contributors

Author: Luise V. Marino
Author: Sophie Coyne
Author: Megan Leppan
Author: Steve Ridgeway
Author: Tara Bharucha
Author: Colette Cochrane
Author: Catarina Fandinga
Author: Karla Palframan
Author: Leanne Rees
Author: Ahmed Osman
Author: Mark J. Johnson
Author: Anna Hurley-Wallace ORCID iD

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