“My Life in the Hospital”: Narratives of Children With a Medical Condition

Pediatric hospitalization is a common experience that may increase children’s sense of isolation and impinge on their social-emotional wellbeing. Educators and medical practitioners could minimize these negative effects of hospitalization if they were able to listen to the voices of the children and...

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Main Authors: Michele Capurso, Federico Bianchi di Castelbianco, Magda Di Renzo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2021-02-01
Series:Continuity in Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://continuityineducation.org/articles/12
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spelling doaj-79c0341ef89c4168992deddc13241c902021-03-16T04:59:09ZengUbiquity PressContinuity in Education 2631-91792021-02-012110.5334/cie.1215“My Life in the Hospital”: Narratives of Children With a Medical ConditionMichele Capurso0Federico Bianchi di Castelbianco1Magda Di Renzo2Università degli Studi di PerugiaIstituto di OrtofologiaUniversità degli Studi di PerugiaPediatric hospitalization is a common experience that may increase children’s sense of isolation and impinge on their social-emotional wellbeing. Educators and medical practitioners could minimize these negative effects of hospitalization if they were able to listen to the voices of the children and, therefore, better meet their needs. This qualitative study provides an overview of how children with a medical condition actively construct and organize their thoughts and feelings about illness, life in hospital, and relationships. We extrapolated from a collection of children’s narratives from a previous more comprehensive study (consisting of 379 narratives from children in 29 public hospitals across Italy, age range 3–14 years). Narratives grouped under the headings “Me and my illness” or “Me and the others” were selected and analyzed using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) to identify the richness and complexity of children’s experience. Results showed that children’s description of their illness was affected both by cognitive and social factors. For children, the concept of feeling ill or well is not linked only to the fact that they are in hospital for a medical condition; rather, it is influenced by their ability to form relationships with others, play, be active, and feel alive within the hospital environment. Listening to narratives can deepen our understanding of children’s illness-related experiences and how they make sense of their situation. A set of practice implications are presented to help health professionals and educators to improve their listening capabilities and better prevent adverse pediatric hospitalization outcomes.https://continuityineducation.org/articles/12children’ narrativehospitalplayrelationshipsinterpretative phenomenological analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michele Capurso
Federico Bianchi di Castelbianco
Magda Di Renzo
spellingShingle Michele Capurso
Federico Bianchi di Castelbianco
Magda Di Renzo
“My Life in the Hospital”: Narratives of Children With a Medical Condition
Continuity in Education
children’ narrative
hospital
play
relationships
interpretative phenomenological analysis
author_facet Michele Capurso
Federico Bianchi di Castelbianco
Magda Di Renzo
author_sort Michele Capurso
title “My Life in the Hospital”: Narratives of Children With a Medical Condition
title_short “My Life in the Hospital”: Narratives of Children With a Medical Condition
title_full “My Life in the Hospital”: Narratives of Children With a Medical Condition
title_fullStr “My Life in the Hospital”: Narratives of Children With a Medical Condition
title_full_unstemmed “My Life in the Hospital”: Narratives of Children With a Medical Condition
title_sort “my life in the hospital”: narratives of children with a medical condition
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Continuity in Education
issn 2631-9179
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Pediatric hospitalization is a common experience that may increase children’s sense of isolation and impinge on their social-emotional wellbeing. Educators and medical practitioners could minimize these negative effects of hospitalization if they were able to listen to the voices of the children and, therefore, better meet their needs. This qualitative study provides an overview of how children with a medical condition actively construct and organize their thoughts and feelings about illness, life in hospital, and relationships. We extrapolated from a collection of children’s narratives from a previous more comprehensive study (consisting of 379 narratives from children in 29 public hospitals across Italy, age range 3–14 years). Narratives grouped under the headings “Me and my illness” or “Me and the others” were selected and analyzed using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) to identify the richness and complexity of children’s experience. Results showed that children’s description of their illness was affected both by cognitive and social factors. For children, the concept of feeling ill or well is not linked only to the fact that they are in hospital for a medical condition; rather, it is influenced by their ability to form relationships with others, play, be active, and feel alive within the hospital environment. Listening to narratives can deepen our understanding of children’s illness-related experiences and how they make sense of their situation. A set of practice implications are presented to help health professionals and educators to improve their listening capabilities and better prevent adverse pediatric hospitalization outcomes.
topic children’ narrative
hospital
play
relationships
interpretative phenomenological analysis
url https://continuityineducation.org/articles/12
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