Metadata
Title
COVID-19: Impact on Pediatric Palliative Care
Authors
Scott HM; Coombes L; Braybrook D; Roach A; Hardardottir D; Bristowe K; Ellis-Smith C; Higginson I; Gao W; Bluebond-Langner M; Farsides B; Murtagh FE; Fraser LK; Harding R
Year
2022
Publication
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management
Abstract
Context: Children and young people with life-limiting or life-threatening conditions and their families are potentially vulnerable during COVID-19 lockdowns due to pre-existing high clinical support needs and social participation limitations. Objective(s): To explore the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdowns on this population. Method(s): Sub-analysis of an emergent COVID-19 related theme from a larger semi-structured interview study investigating priority pediatric palliative care outcomes. One hundred and six United Kingdom-wide purposively-sampled Children and young people with life-limiting or life-threatening conditions, parent/carers, siblings, health professionals, and commissioners. Result(s): COVID-19 was raised by participants in 12/44 interviews conducted after the United Kingdom’s first confirmed COVID-19 case. Key themes included loss of vital social support, disruption to services important to families, and additional psychological distress. Conclusion(s): Continued delivery of child- and family-centered palliative care requires innovative assessment and delivery of psycho-social support. Disruptions within treatment and care providers may compound support needs, requiring cordination for families facing multiagency delays. Copyright © 2022 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine
Authors
Bluebond-Langner M | Braybrook D | Bristowe K | Coombes L | Ellis-Smith C | Farsides B | Fraser LK | Gao W | Hardardottir D | Harding R | Higginson I | Murtagh FE | Roach A | Scott HM
MeSH
Adolescent | Child | Communicable Disease Control | COVID-19 | Family/px [Psychology] | Humans | Palliative Care | Palliative Care/px [Psychology] | Pandemics