Are parents of children hospitalized with severe community‐acquired pneumonia more satisfied with care when physicians allow them to share decisions on the antibiotic route?

Context and objective Despite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community‐acquired pneumonia (CAP), hospitalized children often receive injected antibiotics. To investigate whether shared decision‐making (choosing the antibiotic route)...

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Published in:Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy Vol. 18; no. 6; pp. 2278 - 2287
Main Authors: Rosati, Paola, Di Salvo, Viviana, Crudo, Stefania, D'Amico, Roberto, Carlino, Cecilia, Marchili, Maria Rosaria, Gonfiantini, Michaela, Di Ciommo, Vincenzo
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01-12-2015
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Abstract Context and objective Despite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community‐acquired pneumonia (CAP), hospitalized children often receive injected antibiotics. To investigate whether shared decision‐making (choosing the antibiotic route) influences parental satisfaction. Design, setting and participants In a one‐year questionnaire‐based study, we enrolled consecutive children hospitalized for CAP. At admission, all children's parents received a leaflet on CAP. Parents arriving during the daytime were assigned to a shared group and could choose the antibiotic route, those admitted at other times were assigned to an unshared group for whom physicians chose the antibiotic route. Shared group parents answered anonymous questionnaire investigating why they chose a specific route. Parents in both groups answered another anonymous questionnaire at discharge assessing perceived satisfaction with care. Main outcome measure Parents' satisfaction with perceived medical information as assessed by data from a questionnaire. Results Of the 95 children enrolled, more children's parents were assigned to the unshared than the shared group (77 vs. 18). Of the 18 children's parents in the shared group, 14 chose the oral antibiotic route mainly to avoid painful injections. Doctors explanations were considered better in the shared than in the unshared group (P = 0.02). Discussion and conclusions The larger number of children's parents assigned to the unshared group reflects paediatricians' reluctance to offer shared‐decision making. Well‐informed parents prefer oral antibiotic therapy for children with severe CAP. Allowing parents choose the antibiotic route respects parents' wishes, reduces children's pain and improves satisfaction.
AbstractList CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVEDespite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), hospitalized children often receive injected antibiotics. To investigate whether shared decision-making (choosing the antibiotic route) influences parental satisfaction.DESIGN, SETTING AND PARTICIPANTSIn a one-year questionnaire-based study, we enrolled consecutive children hospitalized for CAP. At admission, all children's parents received a leaflet on CAP. Parents arriving during the daytime were assigned to a shared group and could choose the antibiotic route, those admitted at other times were assigned to an unshared group for whom physicians chose the antibiotic route. Shared group parents answered anonymous questionnaire investigating why they chose a specific route. Parents in both groups answered another anonymous questionnaire at discharge assessing perceived satisfaction with care.MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREParents' satisfaction with perceived medical information as assessed by data from a questionnaire.RESULTSOf the 95 children enrolled, more children's parents were assigned to the unshared than the shared group (77 vs. 18). Of the 18 children's parents in the shared group, 14 chose the oral antibiotic route mainly to avoid painful injections. Doctors explanations were considered better in the shared than in the unshared group (P = 0.02).DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONSThe larger number of children's parents assigned to the unshared group reflects paediatricians' reluctance to offer shared-decision making. Well-informed parents prefer oral antibiotic therapy for children with severe CAP. Allowing parents choose the antibiotic route respects parents' wishes, reduces children's pain and improves satisfaction.
Context and objective Despite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community‐acquired pneumonia (CAP), hospitalized children often receive injected antibiotics. To investigate whether shared decision‐making (choosing the antibiotic route) influences parental satisfaction. Design, setting and participants In a one‐year questionnaire‐based study, we enrolled consecutive children hospitalized for CAP. At admission, all children's parents received a leaflet on CAP. Parents arriving during the daytime were assigned to a shared group and could choose the antibiotic route, those admitted at other times were assigned to an unshared group for whom physicians chose the antibiotic route. Shared group parents answered anonymous questionnaire investigating why they chose a specific route. Parents in both groups answered another anonymous questionnaire at discharge assessing perceived satisfaction with care. Main outcome measure Parents' satisfaction with perceived medical information as assessed by data from a questionnaire. Results Of the 95 children enrolled, more children's parents were assigned to the unshared than the shared group (77 vs. 18). Of the 18 children's parents in the shared group, 14 chose the oral antibiotic route mainly to avoid painful injections. Doctors explanations were considered better in the shared than in the unshared group (P = 0.02). Discussion and conclusions The larger number of children's parents assigned to the unshared group reflects paediatricians' reluctance to offer shared‐decision making. Well‐informed parents prefer oral antibiotic therapy for children with severe CAP. Allowing parents choose the antibiotic route respects parents' wishes, reduces children's pain and improves satisfaction.
Context and objective Despite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), hospitalized children often receive injected antibiotics. To investigate whether shared decision-making (choosing the antibiotic route) influences parental satisfaction. Design, setting and participants In a one-year questionnaire-based study, we enrolled consecutive children hospitalized for CAP. At admission, all children's parents received a leaflet on CAP. Parents arriving during the daytime were assigned to a shared group and could choose the antibiotic route, those admitted at other times were assigned to an unshared group for whom physicians chose the antibiotic route. Shared group parents answered anonymous questionnaire investigating why they chose a specific route. Parents in both groups answered another anonymous questionnaire at discharge assessing perceived satisfaction with care. Main outcome measure Parents' satisfaction with perceived medical information as assessed by data from a questionnaire. Results Of the 95 children enrolled, more children's parents were assigned to the unshared than the shared group (77 vs. 18). Of the 18 children's parents in the shared group, 14 chose the oral antibiotic route mainly to avoid painful injections. Doctors explanations were considered better in the shared than in the unshared group (P = 0.02). Discussion and conclusions The larger number of children's parents assigned to the unshared group reflects paediatricians' reluctance to offer shared-decision making. Well-informed parents prefer oral antibiotic therapy for children with severe CAP. Allowing parents choose the antibiotic route respects parents' wishes, reduces children's pain and improves satisfaction.
Despite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), hospitalized children often receive injected antibiotics. To investigate whether shared decision-making (choosing the antibiotic route) influences parental satisfaction. In a one-year questionnaire-based study, we enrolled consecutive children hospitalized for CAP. At admission, all children's parents received a leaflet on CAP. Parents arriving during the daytime were assigned to a shared group and could choose the antibiotic route, those admitted at other times were assigned to an unshared group for whom physicians chose the antibiotic route. Shared group parents answered anonymous questionnaire investigating why they chose a specific route. Parents in both groups answered another anonymous questionnaire at discharge assessing perceived satisfaction with care. Parents' satisfaction with perceived medical information as assessed by data from a questionnaire. Of the 95 children enrolled, more children's parents were assigned to the unshared than the shared group (77 vs. 18). Of the 18 children's parents in the shared group, 14 chose the oral antibiotic route mainly to avoid painful injections. Doctors explanations were considered better in the shared than in the unshared group (P = 0.02). The larger number of children's parents assigned to the unshared group reflects paediatricians' reluctance to offer shared-decision making. Well-informed parents prefer oral antibiotic therapy for children with severe CAP. Allowing parents choose the antibiotic route respects parents' wishes, reduces children's pain and improves satisfaction.
Author Rosati, Paola
Di Salvo, Viviana
D'Amico, Roberto
Di Ciommo, Vincenzo
Gonfiantini, Michaela
Crudo, Stefania
Carlino, Cecilia
Marchili, Maria Rosaria
AuthorAffiliation 1 Unit of Clinical Epidemiology Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital IRCCS Rome Italy
4 Reasearch Training Program Facoltà di Medicina e Chirurgia Università La Sapienza Rome Italy
5 Department of Paediatrics Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital IRCCS Rome Italy
2 Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital IRCCS Rome Italy
3 Italian Cochrane Centre Department of Diagnostic Clinical and Public Health Medicine University of Modena and Reggio Emilia Modena Italy
AuthorAffiliation_xml – name: 5 Department of Paediatrics Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital IRCCS Rome Italy
– name: 4 Reasearch Training Program Facoltà di Medicina e Chirurgia Università La Sapienza Rome Italy
– name: 3 Italian Cochrane Centre Department of Diagnostic Clinical and Public Health Medicine University of Modena and Reggio Emilia Modena Italy
– name: 1 Unit of Clinical Epidemiology Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital IRCCS Rome Italy
– name: 2 Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital IRCCS Rome Italy
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Issue 6
Keywords preference-sensitive decisions
community-acquired infections
shared-decision making
pneumonia
patient participation
evidence-based medicine
Language English
License 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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Snippet Context and objective Despite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community‐acquired pneumonia...
Despite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), hospitalized...
Context and objectiveDespite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community-acquired pneumonia...
CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVEDespite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community-acquired pneumonia...
Context and objective Despite convincing evidence that oral and injected amoxicillin have equal efficacy in children with severe community-acquired pneumonia...
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wiley
SourceType Open Access Repository
Aggregation Database
Index Database
Publisher
StartPage 2278
SubjectTerms Age
Amoxicillin
Anonymity
Anti-Bacterial Agents - therapeutic use
Antibiotics
Assignment
Asthma
Child, Preschool
Children
Children & youth
Clinical decision making
Clinical information
Clinical medicine
Community-Acquired Infections - drug therapy
community‐acquired infections
Consumer Behavior
Decision Making
Drug Administration Routes
Efficacy
evidence‐based medicine
Female
Hospitalization
Hospitals
Humans
Infant
Male
Medical personnel
Original
Original Research Papers
Pain
Parental satisfaction
Parents
Parents & parenting
Parents - psychology
patient participation
Pediatricians
Physicians
Pneumonia
Pneumonia - drug therapy
preference‐sensitive decisions
Questionnaires
Severity
shared‐decision making
Surveys and Questionnaires
Title Are parents of children hospitalized with severe community‐acquired pneumonia more satisfied with care when physicians allow them to share decisions on the antibiotic route?
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fhex.12197
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24766676
https://www.proquest.com/docview/2402266446
https://search.proquest.com/docview/1760893304
https://search.proquest.com/docview/1776668569
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC5810709
Volume 18
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