Moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death
Yes === Children’s hospices provide a range of services for babies, children and young people who have life-shortening conditions, including care after death in specialist ‘cool bedrooms’. Caring for children after death is a challenging area of hospice care, with variation seen within, and between...
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ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-186142021-10-20T05:01:03Z Moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death Tatterton, Michael J. Honour, A. Billington, D. Kirkby, L. Lyon, J.A. Lyon, N. Gaskin, G. Bereavement Care after death Continuing professional development Evidence-based practice Family centred care Hospice Moving and handling Palliative care Practice development Staff support Yes Children’s hospices provide a range of services for babies, children and young people who have life-shortening conditions, including care after death in specialist ‘cool bedrooms’. Caring for children after death is a challenging area of hospice care, with variation seen within, and between organisations. The study aims to identify current practices and to produce guidelines that promote safe practice in moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of children after death. An electronic questionnaire was sent to all 54 British children’s hospices; 33 responded (=62% of hospices). Variation in the way in which children’s hospices delivered care after death was identified, in terms of the length of stay, care provision and equipment used, owing to demands of individual families and the experience and confidence of practitioners. Internal variation in practice can lead to practitioner anxiety, and risk-taking when providing care, particularly in the presence of family members. Practice recommendations have been made that reflect the practical demands of caring for a child’s body after death; these have been split into two parts: moving and handling considerations and managing physiological deterioration. These recommendations should be used to support the development of policy and practice, allowing organisations to standardise staff expectations and to support practitioners when caring for children after death. 2021-10-02T19:13:21Z 2021-10-11T09:17:09Z 2021-10-02T19:13:21Z 2021-10-11T09:17:09Z 2021 2021-08-11 2021-10-02T19:13:22Z Article Accepted manuscript Tatterton MJ, Honour A, Billington D et al (2021) Moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death. Nursing Children and Young People. Accepted for publication. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/18614 en (c) 2021 RCN. Full-text reproduced in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. |
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language |
en |
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topic |
Bereavement Care after death Continuing professional development Evidence-based practice Family centred care Hospice Moving and handling Palliative care Practice development Staff support |
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Bereavement Care after death Continuing professional development Evidence-based practice Family centred care Hospice Moving and handling Palliative care Practice development Staff support Tatterton, Michael J. Honour, A. Billington, D. Kirkby, L. Lyon, J.A. Lyon, N. Gaskin, G. Moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death |
description |
Yes === Children’s hospices provide a range of services for babies, children and young people who have life-shortening conditions, including care after death in specialist ‘cool bedrooms’. Caring for children after death is a challenging area of hospice care, with variation seen within, and between organisations. The study aims to identify current practices and to produce guidelines that promote safe practice in moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of children after death.
An electronic questionnaire was sent to all 54 British children’s hospices; 33 responded (=62% of hospices). Variation in the way in which children’s hospices delivered care after death was identified, in terms of the length of stay, care provision and equipment used, owing to demands of individual families and the experience and confidence of practitioners. Internal
variation in practice can lead to practitioner anxiety, and risk-taking when providing care, particularly in the presence of family members. Practice recommendations have been made that reflect the practical demands of caring for a child’s body after death; these have been split into two parts: moving and handling considerations and managing physiological deterioration.
These recommendations should be used to support the development of policy and practice, allowing organisations to standardise staff expectations and to support practitioners when caring for children after death. |
author |
Tatterton, Michael J. Honour, A. Billington, D. Kirkby, L. Lyon, J.A. Lyon, N. Gaskin, G. |
author_facet |
Tatterton, Michael J. Honour, A. Billington, D. Kirkby, L. Lyon, J.A. Lyon, N. Gaskin, G. |
author_sort |
Tatterton, Michael J. |
title |
Moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death |
title_short |
Moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death |
title_full |
Moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death |
title_fullStr |
Moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death |
title_full_unstemmed |
Moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death |
title_sort |
moving and handling and managing physiological deterioration of deceased children in hospice cool rooms: practice guidelines for care after death |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10454/18614 |
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