Experience of health care at a reference centre as reported by patients and parents of children with rare conditions

Abstract Background Whilst diagnostic pathways for children with rare conditions have shown marked improvement, concerns remain about the care children with rare conditions receive at the level of the health care provider. There is, therefore, a need to improve our understanding of the health care r...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Monica Hytiris, Daisy Johnston, Shannon Mullen, Arlene Smyth, Elizabeth Dougan, Martina Rodie, S. Faisal Ahmed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-021-01708-5
id doaj-a6ff9c8c94fc48ada5abe5d1d3bce4d6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a6ff9c8c94fc48ada5abe5d1d3bce4d62021-02-07T12:10:56ZengBMCOrphanet Journal of Rare Diseases1750-11722021-02-0116111310.1186/s13023-021-01708-5Experience of health care at a reference centre as reported by patients and parents of children with rare conditionsMonica Hytiris0Daisy Johnston1Shannon Mullen2Arlene Smyth3Elizabeth Dougan4Martina Rodie5S. Faisal Ahmed6Office for Rare Conditions, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, University of GlasgowOffice for Rare Conditions, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, University of GlasgowOffice for Rare Conditions, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, University of GlasgowOffice for Rare Conditions, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, University of GlasgowOffice for Rare Conditions, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, University of GlasgowOffice for Rare Conditions, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, University of GlasgowOffice for Rare Conditions, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, University of GlasgowAbstract Background Whilst diagnostic pathways for children with rare conditions have shown marked improvement, concerns remain about the care children with rare conditions receive at the level of the health care provider. There is, therefore, a need to improve our understanding of the health care received and explore the development of benchmarks that can be regularly monitored. Methods Patients and parents with rare conditions at a tertiary children’s hospital were approached to complete a questionnaire-based survey that enquired on their experience of clinical care. The survey explored six key themes: diagnosis; provision of information; availability of support; satisfaction with healthcare team; awareness and support for life-limiting conditions; and participation in research. Results 130 questionnaires were completed on behalf of 134 patients between 2018 and 2020. Of these, 114 (85%) had received a formal diagnosis, 5 (4%) had a suspected diagnosis and 15 (11%) were undiagnosed. Of the 114 who had received a diagnosis, 24 (20%) were diagnosed within 6 months of developing symptoms, and 22 (20%) within 1–3 years. Seventy patients (53%) reported that they were given little or no information around the time of diagnosis, whilst 81 (63%) felt they were currently well supported, mostly from family members, followed by friends, hospital services, school, other community based healthcare services and lastly, primary care. Of the 127 who were asked, 88 (69%) reported a consistent team of healthcare professionals taking overall responsibility for their care, 86 (67%) felt part of the team, 74 (58%) were satisfied with the level of knowledge of the professionals, and 86 (68%) knew who to contact regarding their condition. Of the 91 who were asked, 23 (25%) were aware their child had a life limiting condition, but only 4 (17%) were receiving specialist support for this. Of 17 who were asked about research, 4 (24%) were actively participating in research, whilst the remainder were all willing to participate in future research. Conclusions The survey provides a unique insight into the experience of patients and parents within a specialist centre and the benchmarks that it has revealed can be used for future improvement in services.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-021-01708-5BenchmarksPaediatricsPatient experienceRare disease
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Monica Hytiris
Daisy Johnston
Shannon Mullen
Arlene Smyth
Elizabeth Dougan
Martina Rodie
S. Faisal Ahmed
spellingShingle Monica Hytiris
Daisy Johnston
Shannon Mullen
Arlene Smyth
Elizabeth Dougan
Martina Rodie
S. Faisal Ahmed
Experience of health care at a reference centre as reported by patients and parents of children with rare conditions
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Benchmarks
Paediatrics
Patient experience
Rare disease
author_facet Monica Hytiris
Daisy Johnston
Shannon Mullen
Arlene Smyth
Elizabeth Dougan
Martina Rodie
S. Faisal Ahmed
author_sort Monica Hytiris
title Experience of health care at a reference centre as reported by patients and parents of children with rare conditions
title_short Experience of health care at a reference centre as reported by patients and parents of children with rare conditions
title_full Experience of health care at a reference centre as reported by patients and parents of children with rare conditions
title_fullStr Experience of health care at a reference centre as reported by patients and parents of children with rare conditions
title_full_unstemmed Experience of health care at a reference centre as reported by patients and parents of children with rare conditions
title_sort experience of health care at a reference centre as reported by patients and parents of children with rare conditions
publisher BMC
series Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
issn 1750-1172
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Whilst diagnostic pathways for children with rare conditions have shown marked improvement, concerns remain about the care children with rare conditions receive at the level of the health care provider. There is, therefore, a need to improve our understanding of the health care received and explore the development of benchmarks that can be regularly monitored. Methods Patients and parents with rare conditions at a tertiary children’s hospital were approached to complete a questionnaire-based survey that enquired on their experience of clinical care. The survey explored six key themes: diagnosis; provision of information; availability of support; satisfaction with healthcare team; awareness and support for life-limiting conditions; and participation in research. Results 130 questionnaires were completed on behalf of 134 patients between 2018 and 2020. Of these, 114 (85%) had received a formal diagnosis, 5 (4%) had a suspected diagnosis and 15 (11%) were undiagnosed. Of the 114 who had received a diagnosis, 24 (20%) were diagnosed within 6 months of developing symptoms, and 22 (20%) within 1–3 years. Seventy patients (53%) reported that they were given little or no information around the time of diagnosis, whilst 81 (63%) felt they were currently well supported, mostly from family members, followed by friends, hospital services, school, other community based healthcare services and lastly, primary care. Of the 127 who were asked, 88 (69%) reported a consistent team of healthcare professionals taking overall responsibility for their care, 86 (67%) felt part of the team, 74 (58%) were satisfied with the level of knowledge of the professionals, and 86 (68%) knew who to contact regarding their condition. Of the 91 who were asked, 23 (25%) were aware their child had a life limiting condition, but only 4 (17%) were receiving specialist support for this. Of 17 who were asked about research, 4 (24%) were actively participating in research, whilst the remainder were all willing to participate in future research. Conclusions The survey provides a unique insight into the experience of patients and parents within a specialist centre and the benchmarks that it has revealed can be used for future improvement in services.
topic Benchmarks
Paediatrics
Patient experience
Rare disease
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-021-01708-5
work_keys_str_mv AT monicahytiris experienceofhealthcareatareferencecentreasreportedbypatientsandparentsofchildrenwithrareconditions
AT daisyjohnston experienceofhealthcareatareferencecentreasreportedbypatientsandparentsofchildrenwithrareconditions
AT shannonmullen experienceofhealthcareatareferencecentreasreportedbypatientsandparentsofchildrenwithrareconditions
AT arlenesmyth experienceofhealthcareatareferencecentreasreportedbypatientsandparentsofchildrenwithrareconditions
AT elizabethdougan experienceofhealthcareatareferencecentreasreportedbypatientsandparentsofchildrenwithrareconditions
AT martinarodie experienceofhealthcareatareferencecentreasreportedbypatientsandparentsofchildrenwithrareconditions
AT sfaisalahmed experienceofhealthcareatareferencecentreasreportedbypatientsandparentsofchildrenwithrareconditions
_version_ 1724281597668098048