Abstract

A diagnosis of a long-term illness in a child will bring on a major upheaval in the lives of the whole family involved and leads to a long-standing relationship with health care personnel. The purpose of this study was to describe parents' experiences with their child's illness and treatment and with their relationships with health professionals during the process of learning to care for their child. Data were collected by conducting open-ended interviews with parents (N = 11) whose child had been diagnosed with a physical long-term illness at least 1 year previously and were analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Parents' needs for information and support varied and consisted of different components in different phases of the process. During the diagnostic phase, parents were recipients of information; it was important for them to receive consistent empathetically provided information. In the next phase, parents, having gained experience of day-to-day home care, engaged in a change toward a two-way flow of information with the professionals; mutual trust was essential for the exchange of information needed for a child's proper care. Without a permanent relationship with health professionals, parents showed lack of trust in professionals' knowledge of their child's condition and care. Professionals' lack of trust in parents' expertise in their child's care was also problematic. Health professionals should lay the groundwork for a partnership in which both parties acknowledge each other's competencies; parents' needs ought to be continuously reassessed. A permanent relationship between families and health care personnel is required to achieve this.

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