A child’s emergent admission to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) can strike fear and feelings of helplessness into the hearts of parents who only hours earlier had been in control of their lives. Acute critical illness seriously threatens the parents’ ability to fulfill their familiar and important roles of protecting and providing for their child. The PICU selling can rapidly undermine the sense of competence, control, and stability of even the most dedicated parents. Parental stress is primarily caused by their displacement from familiar rotes, the child’s appearance and behavior, and difficulties in communicating with staff members. In planning interventions, these issues should be considered as well as the specific needs that parents have emphasized: accurate information, ready access to their children, and meaningful participation in their children’s care. Advanced practice nurses are in an excellent position to improve delivery of psychosocial services to parents of critically ill children through direct care, acting as models of care practices and mentoring staff, staff education, policy development, and clinical research
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1 February 1998
Preventing Negative Outcomes of Acute Illness in Children|
February 01 1998
Pediatric Intensive Care: The Parents’ Experience
Elaine C. Meyer, RN, PhD;
Elaine C. Meyer, RN, PhD
*From the Department of Pediatrics, Brown University School of Medicine, Providence, Rhode Island
║Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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Linda K. Snelling, MD;
†From the Department of Pediatrics, Brown University School of Medicine, Providence, Rhode Island
‡From the Department of Anesthesiology, Brown University School of Medicine, Providence, Rhode Island
Reprint requests to Linda K. Snelling, MD, Pediatric Critical Care, Potter 112, Rhode Island Hospital, 593 Eddy St., Providence, RI 02903.
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Lori K. Myren-Manbeck, MA
Lori K. Myren-Manbeck, MA
§Department of Psychology, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rhode Island.
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AACN Adv Crit Care (1998) 9 (1): 64–74.
Citation
Elaine C. Meyer, Linda K. Snelling, Lori K. Myren-Manbeck; Pediatric Intensive Care: The Parents’ Experience. AACN Adv Crit Care 1 February 1998; 9 (1): 64–74. doi:
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