Abstract
Parents of children with cancer value strong therapeutic relationships with oncology clinicians, but not every relationship is positive. To identify the prevalence of challenging parent-clinician relationships in pediatric oncology and factors associated with these challenges from parent and clinician perspectives. This survey was conducted among parents and oncology clinicians of children with cancer within 3 months of diagnosis from November 2015 to July 2019 at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children's Hospital and Texas Children's Hospital. Participants were 400 parents of children with cancer and 80 clinicians (ie, oncology physicians and nurse practitioners). Parents completed surveys about relationships with 1 to 2 primary oncology clinicians; clinicians completed surveys about relationships with parents. Data were analyzed from July 2020 to August 2021. At least 3 previous clinical visits between parent and clinician. The Relationship Challenges Scale Parent Version and Clinician Version were developed and used to measure threats to the therapeutic alliance. For the Relationship Challenges Scale-Parent version, relationships were considered challenging if a parent responded to any single question in the 2 lowest of 4 possible categories. For the Relationship Challenges Scale-Clinician version, challenges were considered to be present if a clinician reported responses in the 3 lowest of 6 possible response categories to any question. Among 400 parents, there were 298 [74.5%] women, 25 Asian individuals (6.3%), 28 Black individuals (7.0%), 97 Hispanic individuals (24.3%), 223 White individuals (55.8%), and 10 individuals (2.4%) with other race or ethnicity; race and ethnicity data were missing for 17 (4.3%) individuals. Among 80 clinicians, there were 57 (71.3%) women, 38 attending physicians (47.5%), 32 fellows (40.0%), and 10 nurse practitioners (12.5%). Parents identified 676 unique relationships with clinicians, and clinician reports were available for 338 relationships. Among 338 relationships with paired parent and clinician surveys, 81 relationships (24.0%) were considered challenging by parents, 127 relationships (37.6%) were considered challenging by clinicians, and 33 relationships (9.8%) were considered challenging by parent and clinician. Parents with Asian or other race or ethnicity (odds ratio [OR] vs White parents, 3.62; 95% CI, 1.59-8.26) or who had lower educational attainment (OR for ≤high school vs >high school, 3.03; 95% CI, 1.56-5.90) were more likely to experience relationships as challenging. Clinicians used a variety of strategies more frequently in 127 relationships in which they perceived challenges vs 211 relationships in which they did not perceive challenges, such as holding regular family meetings (22 relationships [17.3%] vs 13 relationships [6.2%]; P = .009) and offering extra time and attention (66 relationships [52%] vs 60 relationships [28.4%]; P < .001). However, these strategies were not used with increased frequency when parents experienced relationships as challenging vs when parents did not experience this. This survey study found that nearly one-quarter of parents of children with cancer reported challenges in the therapeutic relationship with their oncologist and that clinicians used strategies to improve relationships more frequently when they experienced the relationship as challenging. These findings suggest that new strategies are needed to improve experiences for parents and to help clinicians recognize and attend to parents whose experiences are suboptimal.
Highlights
IntroductionPatient-centered care is the standard for cancer care,[1] associated with a better experience for patients and serving as the foundation of high-quality, safe medical care.[1,2,3] One aspect of such care is the patient-clinician relationship; patients want to be treated with sensitivity and caring, be involved in decisions about care, and have relationships based on mutual respect and trust.[4,5,6,7] research in adults has found that up to 30% of patient-physician relationships are challenging,[8,9,10] suggesting that not every patient benefits from positive relationships with clinicians.Research on the parent-clinician relationship in pediatrics, a field in which parents rather than patients form primary decision-making relationships with clinicians, is limited.[11]
Parents with Asian or other race or ethnicity or who had lower educational attainment (OR for Յhigh school vs >high school, 3.03; 95% CI, 1.56-5.90) were more likely to experience relationships as challenging
These strategies were not used with increased frequency when parents experienced relationships as challenging vs when parents did not experience this. This survey study found that nearly one-quarter of parents of children with cancer reported challenges in the therapeutic relationship with their oncologist and that clinicians used strategies to improve relationships more frequently when they experienced the relationship as challenging. These findings suggest that new strategies are needed to improve experiences for parents and to help clinicians recognize and attend to parents whose experiences are suboptimal
Summary
Patient-centered care is the standard for cancer care,[1] associated with a better experience for patients and serving as the foundation of high-quality, safe medical care.[1,2,3] One aspect of such care is the patient-clinician relationship; patients want to be treated with sensitivity and caring, be involved in decisions about care, and have relationships based on mutual respect and trust.[4,5,6,7] research in adults has found that up to 30% of patient-physician relationships are challenging,[8,9,10] suggesting that not every patient benefits from positive relationships with clinicians.Research on the parent-clinician relationship in pediatrics, a field in which parents rather than patients form primary decision-making relationships with clinicians, is limited.[11]. Patient-centered care is the standard for cancer care,[1] associated with a better experience for patients and serving as the foundation of high-quality, safe medical care.[1,2,3] One aspect of such care is the patient-clinician relationship; patients want to be treated with sensitivity and caring, be involved in decisions about care, and have relationships based on mutual respect and trust.[4,5,6,7] research in adults has found that up to 30% of patient-physician relationships are challenging,[8,9,10] suggesting that not every patient benefits from positive relationships with clinicians. Clinicians experience challenges as relationships in which significant time and effort is required to ensure good communication and care
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