This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow View responses
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Right arrow Citation Map
Services
Right arrow E-mail this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Add to My File Cabinet
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via CrossRef
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Perrin, E. C.
Right arrow Articles by Young, M. H.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by Perrin, E. C.
Right arrow Articles by Young, M. H.
Related Collections
Right arrow Miscellaneous

PEDIATRICS Vol. 105 No. 1 Supplement January 2000, pp. 277-285

Shared Vision: Concordance Among Fathers, Mothers, and Pediatricians About Unmet Needs of Children With Chronic Health Conditions

Ellen C. Perrin, MD, Corinne Lewkowicz, PhD, and Martin H. Young, PhD

From the University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics, Worcester, Massachusetts.


    ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References

Objective.  These analyses were undertaken to investigate the number and types of services and assistance believed to be useful to children with a chronic health condition and their families. The perspective of mothers, fathers, and primary care physicians were sought separately and compared.

Methods.  Families that include at least 1 child with a chronic health condition were selected from pediatric practices in Central Massachusetts. All 3 respondents completed a questionnaire describing their own perspective of current needs and of the severity of the child's condition. The 3 perspectives are compared statistically and areas of agreement/disagreement are described.

Results.  Mothers, fathers, and physicians described children's and families' needs with a surprising degree of concordance. On the other hand, pediatricians identified fewer needs, despite rating the severity of children's illnesses as greater than did parents. Mothers and fathers agreed substantially about the level of severity of their child's condition and about their unmet needs.

Conclusions.  It is important that pediatric practice systems include effective mechanisms to assess parents' opinions regarding the unmet needs of their child/family in the face of a child with a chronic health condition. Without input from families, pediatricians are aware of only some of the needs that parents identify. Pediatrics 2000;105:277-285; children, chronic health condition.

About 15% to 18% of children in the United States have a chronic health condition.1-3 They and their families may have a large variety of health-related needs over and above those of their healthy peers. Families and their primary care physicians are centrally responsible for identifying, obtaining, coordinating, and monitoring a wide range of services for these children.4-6 The number and type of needs and services they identify depend in part on the particular condition(s) the child has, its manifestations and severity, the child's age, the parents' social circumstances, and the particular medical care arrangements available to the family.7,8

Both identifying children's and families' needs and making the arrangements necessary to meet them have been inefficient and rarely systematic processes often associated with dissatisfaction on the parts of both parents and physicians.9-12 Long-term needs especially may be met inadequately5,6 despite regular contact with health care professionals9,13 and physicians' interest in helping in this domain.14,15 Mothers and fathers may identify differing needs and desires with regard to the care of their child, and these may be different from physicians' beliefs about the child's and family's needs.11,16,17 Many observers have identified a few predictable clusters of children's and families' needs that are independent of the child's particular diagnosis49-11,13,18,19: family solidarity and support, information, finances, social support, child care, and professional services.

Most frequently noted to be inadequately met has been the need for information.11,13,16,18,20 Ninety-one percent of the parents surveyed by Walker et al4 reported that they would like to obtain more information about the child's condition, its treatment, and its long-term implications. Parents also appreciated getting information about the child's medical problem directly from the child's physician. In addition to more information, families wish for help from an integrated oversight system that helps them to evaluate the child's needs and coordinate long-term care planning for the child and family.5 Some have construed this "supervision" function as a role for the primary care pediatrician.6,14,15

Other investigators have reported that parents' primary unmet need was for family support and counseling.20,21 Most research suggests close to double the prevalence of emotional, developmental, and educational difficulties among children with a chronic condition as compared with healthy children.320-24 Various interventions have been tried in an effort to prevent and/or ameliorate these secondary psychosocial consequences of chronic health problems.25,26 Formal and informal social support as well as individual, group, and family therapy have been helpful to many families.

A study of adolescents found that their needs tended to focus on vocational and adaptive issues related to having a long-term condition, rather than issues related to the particular condition per se.18 Child care (both regular and respite) is a prevalent need for families with young children.10 Neither demographic variables such as race, socioeconomic status, birth order, and child age, nor diagnostic classification have been found to be related to the number or types of needs expressed by parents.11,27,28

Parents and health care providers have differing important perspectives on their child's needs and the services that would be beneficial for a child with a chronic condition.29 Older children and adolescents also may have ideas about the services that would foster their successful adaptation.18,19 If parents and physicians concur regarding the child's and family's needs, long-term care plans are likely to address more fully the child's particular issues and concerns, and parents are likely to be content with the child's overall care.30-32

The project reported here differs from most of its predecessors in the setting, the age of the children, their health conditions, and the respondents. This study was based in a primary care context, while almost all earlier studies assessing the needs of parents have focused on children in hospitals, early intervention programs, or pediatric specialty clinics. We have included children across the pediatric age range with a wide variety of chronic health conditions, and we have solicited parallel information about each child from pediatricians, mothers, and fathers.

Abundant anecdotal reports recount insufficient communication between parents and primary care physicians regarding children's care,12,31,33 and generate expectations that collaborative decision-making or "family-centered care" might improve the process of their care.32,34,35 Nevertheless, there has been no systematic investigation of the concordance among mothers', fathers', and physicians' reports of the unmet needs of children with chronic health problems and their families.

Previous investigations of mothers' and fathers' reports about their children's behavior have demonstrated wide disparity in both their observations and their interpretations of the behavior.17,36 With regard to the identification of unmet child/family needs, most investigations have either asked only mothers or combined responses from mothers and fathers as "parents."4,5,6,9,10,13,16 The few investigations that have included fathers have focused primarily on the effect on the father of having a child with a chronic health condition and the extent to which fathers are involved in the care of their ill child---not on their perceptions of the child's or family's needs. When both parents have identified their child's unmet needs, the needs identified by mothers and fathers differed somewhat, and mothers expressed more needs than did fathers.11,17

In one study Bailey et al11 obtained responses from 106 mother-father pairs of children <3 years old who were involved in an early intervention program for children with developmental disabilities. They found that mothers expressed more and somewhat different needs than did fathers. Both parents expressed needs for information and for child care; mothers were more likely than fathers to identify a need for enhanced family and social support and for help with interpersonal interactions regarding their child.

Horn et al29 found broad agreement between "families" and "professionals" about the stressors experienced and the coping strategies used by children during a lengthy hospitalization. In contrast, parents of children with chronic illnesses were noted by Liptak and Revell6 to be far more likely than physicians to identify a need for information about the child's diagnosis, treatment and prognosis, financial assistance, and social/recreational opportunities. Several studies have identified similar disparities in the priorities of parents and primary care pediatricians regarding the services needed for the care of children with a variety of chronic physical illnesses and disabilities.11,37

Parents in general appreciate the opportunity to have their points of view regarding their child's condition and needs heard and understood.38,39 Collaboration among physician, parents, and the child/adolescent is one of the basic principles of family-centered care.30-32,34,35 Once overlapping and divergent perceptions are made explicit, they can be discussed, understood, and reconciled, and a joint plan agreed to by all participants.

The purposes of the present study were to: 1) determine the extent and characteristics of agreement among mothers, fathers, and physicians regarding the unmet needs of particular children with chronic health conditions and their families, and 2) investigate the factors associated with greater or lesser disparity among different participants' perceptions of these needs. Our hypotheses were that 1) parents would judge children's conditions as more severe than would physicians and than a semi-objective proxy of "intensity"; 2) mothers and fathers would differ in the amount and types of needs they identified as potentially beneficial; and 3) parents would indicate more needs than would physicians, especially in the categories of "information" and "support."

    METHODS
Top
Abstract
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References

Participants

Eleven pediatricians in 5 pediatric practice groups participated in a project that aimed to improve the coordination of care for children with chronic conditions in the context of community primary care settings. These pediatricians agreed to participate in the project because of their interest in improving their practice with regard to the care of children with chronic health conditions and their families. Two practiced as part of a staff model health maintenance organization, 2 as independent partners, 3 as members of a 6-member pediatric practice, and 4 in semi-rural multispecialty practices.

Pediatricians identified families who had a child with a chronic health condition, using billing records from the previous 2 years and a broad range of diagnostic codes based on the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) coding system. A chronic health condition was operationally defined as a condition that had lasted or was expected to last 1 year or more, and that could be expected to require more than the usual amount of medical supervision.

Because this project was based in primary care pediatric office settings, the children involved differed from those included in most prior investigations. Consultation with the participating pediatricians as the project developed clarified the importance of using a broadly inclusive definition of "chronic health conditions." For example, a child with a severe language delay, attention deficit disorder, or chronic recurrent otitis media may meet the eligibility guidelines described above as thoroughly as a child with cerebral palsy, mental retardation, or asthma. The added needs these children present to conscientious health care professionals and parents are independent of their particular diagnoses. A systematic investigation of whether children with differing conditions present differing kinds or numbers of needs would be instructive. Unfortunately, the size of the sample in this project did not allow such a detailed subgroup analysis.

We have attempted a rough approximation to address this question. We created clusters of children in 4 broad diagnostic subgroups. Children who had a respiratory condition only (eg, asthma, chronic otitis media) or a neurologic condition only (eg, seizure disorder, mental retardation, cerebral palsy, attention deficit disorder) accounted for the largest condition-specific groups. A third group was made up of children with a large variety of other conditions (eg, diabetes, cardiac conditions, renal conditions, major orthopedic abnormalities). Children who had more than 1 discrete condition were combined in a separate cluster. Children with either a respiratory or a neurologic condition in addition to a substantially different chronic condition were included in this last group.

Parents were contacted by mail by their primary care physician and asked for permission to have a member of the research staff contact them. If they agreed, the project was explained by the project director over the phone. If parents then agreed to participate they were entered tentatively into the study sample. A subsequent mailing included a description of the project and its response requirements, a request for information about the family, and a document to be signed to verify informed consent. Once the latter 2 items were returned, the family was considered enrolled in the project. If more than 1 child in the family had a chronic condition, the child rated as more severely affected was selected. These procedures for sample selection and the research protocol itself were approved by the Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center.

Procedure

Once enrolled, physicians and both parents provided information separately about the severity of the child's condition and their perception of the child's and family's current needs. The questionnaires were mailed separately to each parent, along with a letter requesting that they complete them independently of the other parent. This procedure was followed whether parents were living together or apart. Parents also provided demographic information and detailed information about their child's condition. Socioeconomic status was estimated using parental education and insurance information.

Unmet "Needs" A list of 23 categories of "needs," listed in Table 2, was assembled from previous investigations4,5,10,11,13,18,19 and clinical experience. Each of the 3 respondents (mothers, fathers, and physicians) noted which of these 23 items/services the child/family "would benefit from." For the purposes of this publication, we have used the term "needs" to designate the items chosen from this list, but this word was not used in communications with the families because of the known reluctance of respondents to acknowledge needing anything.

                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

TABLE 2
Reliabilities Among Items in Four Subgroups

Severity Because of the wide range of diagnoses included, no physiologic measure of severity could be applied. All 3 respondents rated their assessment of the severity of the child's condition on a 4-point scale (slight, mild, moderate, severe). The severity of the child's condition was estimated somewhat less subjectively as well. This assessment, called "intensity," was created from parents' responses to 6 questions: in the previous year 1) the number of days their child missed from school attributable to his/her condition(s); 2) the number of days someone in the family stayed home from work because of the child's health condition(s); 3) the number of times the child was seen in the primary care doctor's office; 4) the number of doctor visits made specifically to discuss the care of the child's ongoing health condition(s); 5) the number of different diagnoses the child had been given; and 6) the presence of any limitation of activity as a result of the child's health condition(s). All responses were converted to 4-point scales in which a higher score reflected greater presumed severity of the condition(s). If the mother's and father's responses were disparate, the higher score was used for these analyses. These 6 scores were then combined, and the mean used as a proxy for the "intensity" with which the child's condition(s) appeared to have been experienced by the child and family. Thus, there are 4 scores reflecting an estimate of "severity": subjective ratings by mother, father, and physician, and a more objective score or "intensity."

Analyses

Results were analyzed in 4 steps. First, mothers', fathers', and physicians' responses were compared with regard to both the total number and the types of needs each respondent noted. Pearson's product moment correlations, paired t tests, and Cohen's kappa  analyses were used to determine the level of agreement among them. Second, a factor analysis, using a principal components extraction and a varimax rotation, was conducted for 2 reasons: 1) to determine if physicians, mothers, and fathers shared similar perceptions about the services they felt were needed; and 2) to identify common groupings of items for further analyses. A factor was identified if it had an eigenvalue of at least 1.0, and an item was identified as belonging in a given factor if it had a factor loading of at least .40. Third, because mothers' and fathers' responses were very consistent within these clusters, they were combined, and physicians' responses were compared with this combined parent response. The level of concordance between parents' and physicians' views regarding the clusters of needs was assessed using Pearson's product moment correlations and paired t tests. Fourth, multiple regression analyses were used to identify some of the characteristics that predicted agreement between parents and physicians regarding current needs.

    RESULTS
Top
Abstract
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References

I. Description of the Sample

Using billing data, 234 children were identified as having a chronic health condition. Of these, 168 agreed to participate in the project and 163 provided informed consent and basic demographic information and were thus enrolled in the project, a participation rate of 70%. Responses regarding 123 children were used for these analyses: 123 from physicians, 122 from mothers, and 100 from fathers (99 mother-father pairs). Participants did not differ from nonparticipants in the gender or age of the child or the constellation of diagnoses. Further information about the nonparticipating children is not available.

Children ranged in age from 2 months to 15 years, and 48% were female. Diagnostic information is available for 119 children as noted in Table 1: 33 children (28%) had multiple conditions; 25 were identified as having a primary respiratory condition; 39 had a primary neurologic condition; and 22 had a variety of "other conditions." The socioeconomic status of the families was primarily middle class (79% class 2 or 3), with only 18% class 4 and 5. 

                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

TABLE 1
Description of the Sample

II. Development of Subgroups of Items

Factor analyses informed the creation of discrete subgroups of items. Physicians' perceptions of families' needs clustered into 7 factors, accounting for 62.3% of the variance. One item did not load onto any factor: the family's need for advice regarding finances and health insurance. Similarly, mothers' assessments of needs also clustered into 7 factors, accounting for 61.7% of the variance, with 5 items not loading on any factor (information for adolescents, genetic counseling, transportation, contact with other families, and social, camp, and recreational activities). Only 6 factors were identified for fathers' assessments of family needs, including all 23 items and accounting for 60.5% of the variance.

To allow for comparisons among mothers', fathers', and physicians' responses, 4 subgroups were created based on the results of the factor analyses and theoretical expectations. These consisted of 1) parents' needs for information and advice; 2) the family's need for contact with similar families; 3) the need for counseling; and 4) specific help needs, such as child care while parents work, help with household projects, home nursing care, and legal assistance. Reliabilities were acceptable for mothers and fathers for all four subgroups (alpha  = .70-.80), but somewhat lower for pediatricians (see Table 2). Four items were not included in any subgroup because they did not cluster in the factor analyses: 1) information for adolescents regarding education and sexuality, 2) job training and work opportunities, 3) genetic counseling, and 4) the child's need for information regarding his/her condition/treatment. These items were treated as individual items only.

III. Severity

Parents and physicians rated the severity of each child's condition on a 4-point scale, ranging from mild to severe. The average severity rating for physicians was 2.97 (SD = .84), for mothers was 2.53 (SD = .96), and for fathers was 2.36 (SD = .94). The difference between physicians and mothers was significant (t(89) = 4.50; P < .001), as was the difference between physicians and fathers (t(65) = 4.15; P < .001). Physicians consistently rated children's conditions as being more severe than did either mothers or fathers. The average "intensity" rating was 2.37 (SD = .77) and was highly correlated with mothers', fathers', and physicians' severity ratings. Mean severity ratings (and standard deviations) did not vary across diagnostic clusters. Thus, our hypothesis---that parents would rate the severity of their children's conditions as greater than physicians did and greater than more objective indicators would suggest---was not supported.

Parents' ratings of the severity of their child's condition(s) were significantly correlated with the number of unmet needs they indicated in the realm of contact needs, counseling needs, and specific help (Table 3). For neither mothers nor fathers was their perception of the severity of the child's condition(s) correlated significantly with their indication of unmet needs for information. Physicians' estimates of severity were moderately to strongly correlated with the number of unmet needs they indicated in each item subgroup. On the other hand, the more objective rating of "intensity" was associated with the number of specific help needs parents endorsed.

                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

TABLE 3
Correlations Among Severity Ratings and Number of Needs Identified in Each Subgroup, for Each Respondent

IV. Concordance Between Mothers and Fathers

We had hypothesized that mothers and fathers would differ in the amounts and types of needs they identified as potentially beneficial. Of the 23 individual items that were examined, mothers identified an average of 9.7 needs (SD = 4.9; range: 0-18), and fathers 9.5 (SD = 5.2; range: 0-22). Mothers and fathers endorsed similar numbers of needs both for the sample as a whole and within each diagnostic cluster (t(98) = .17; P > .05). For both parents, the number of needs differed substantially according to diagnostic cluster (F(3,117) 3.6, P < .05 for mothers; F(3,96) 4.4, P < .01 for fathers). The largest number of needs was endorsed for children with "multiple" conditions and the lowest number for children with respiratory conditions.

Mothers consistently endorsed the items reflecting their need for more information about the child's health condition(s) and about the child's behavior and development. As shown in Table 4, >50% of the mothers also endorsed items pertaining to their need for support: discussion groups for parents and for children, and contact with other families who had a child with a chronic condition. Over half of the mothers indicated also that they wanted more help in identifying social and recreational opportunities for their children and in coordinating their child's overall care. Only 2 items were endorsed by <10% of mothers: career-related information for adolescents, and transportation services. Fathers showed a similar response pattern; more than half endorsed informational items, and <10% endorsed career-related information for adolescents. It is important to note that only 12.2% of the sample (n = 15) were >= 12 years old.

                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

TABLE 4
Proportion of Physicians, Mothers, and Fathers Endorsing Each Need Item

Cohen's kappa  analyses were used to investigate if a pattern existed in the specific needs that were identified by mothers and by fathers. A kappa  score of <.40 was taken to indicate disagreement, and the McNemar chi 2 test was then used to test the direction of the disagreement.40 For 14 of the 23 items mothers and fathers agreed about the presence of the need. For 7 items there was a statistically significant difference between mothers and fathers (kappa  < .40) but the direction of the difference was not predictable, and for only 2 items did mothers consistently indicate a need that fathers did not indicate (information for adolescents regarding education and sexuality, and child/sibling discussion groups).

Mothers and fathers agreed substantially as well about the subgroups of items they thought were needed. Table 5 indicates high correlations between parents in all subgroups, and significant differences between them (using t tests) only for contact needs.

                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

TABLE 5
Relationships Among Respondents on Four Subgroups of Items and on Estimates of Severity

The hypothesis that mothers and fathers would differ in the number and types of unmet needs they identified was supported only in part. Parents agreed substantially about all but the need for increased contact for both adults and children with others dealing with similar life circumstances, which mothers identified more often than fathers.

V. Concordance Between Parents and Physicians

Physicians reported that families had, on average, 7.6 needs (SD = 4.2; range: 0-18). The difference between the number of items endorsed by mothers and physicians was statistically significant (t(121 = -4.70; P < .001), as was the difference between fathers and physicians (t(99) = 3.57; P = .001). Physicians identified the greatest number of needs for children with neurologic conditions, and the fewest for children with respiratory conditions (F(3,118) 8.9; P < .001).

As shown in Table 4, few items were endorsed by the physicians as needed by more than half of the children. Of those that were, 4 pertained to information for both the parent and the child regarding the child's condition and about behavior and development, and 1 addressed families' need for help arranging the child's school program. Three items were endorsed by physicians for <10% of the children: information for adolescents regarding job opportunities, legal assistance, and transportation to medical services.

To investigate different patterns of needs identified by parents and physicians, parents were defined as indicating a need if either the mother or the father endorsed an item. Cohen's kappa and McNemar chi 2 analyses revealed that parents identified a need more often than did physicians for 19 of the 23 items (kappa  <.40; P < .01). This difference was most striking for items that concerned assistance with child care, genetic counseling, information for parents, children, and adolescents, and help in coordinating the child's overall needs and care.

Table 5 summarizes the relationships between the physicians' and each parent's responses regarding the 4 item subgroups. Physicians' responses regarding contact, counseling, and specific help needs were highly correlated with both mothers' and fathers' ratings, but their ratings of information needs were correlated with neither parent's rating. Physicians noted significantly fewer needs with regard to both information and specific help than did either mothers or fathers, and fewer contact needs than did mothers. There were no differences between physicians and either parent in the numbers of items endorsed regarding the family's counseling needs. Both mothers and fathers endorsed a greater total number of needs than did physicians.

These data support the hypothesis that physicians would report fewer and different kinds of needs than parents. Physicians seemed to underestimate especially the need the parents felt for more information regarding the day-to-day management of the child's condition, and the mothers' need for help in facilitating social contact, as well as the parents' need for help in coordinating the child's overall health and developmental circumstances.

VI. Predictors of Concordance

We wondered if physicians might be in closer agreement with parents of children they considered to be most severely affected with their condition(s), as compared with more mildly involved children. Physicians' severity ratings were correlated with both mothers' and fathers' endorsements of specific help needs (for mothers, r = .42, P < .001; for fathers, r = .34, P < .01), as well as with mothers' ratings of contact needs (r = .25; P < .01). The "intensity" rating was correlated both with the number of specific help needs and with the total number of needs endorsed by each of the respondents (mothers r = .34 and .24, P < .001 and <.05; fathers r = .32 and .22, P < .001 and <.05; physicians r = .41 and .31, P < .001).

Multiple regression models were estimated to identify some of the variables that predicted more or less concordance between parents and physicians. The predictor variables of interest were the child's age, the diagnostic cluster, the parents' and physicians' ratings of the severity of the child's condition, and the more objective "intensity" score. An indicator variable was entered initially in the first step to control for effects attributable to individual physicians.a Because these variables did not account for a significant amount of the variance, they were deleted from subsequent models.

The outcome variable was the level of agreement between parents and physicians about each subgroup of needs. Physicians and parents were considered to be in agreement if: 1) the physician and either the mother or the father identified an item as a need; or 2) none of the 3 respondents identified the item as a need. If the physician identified an item as a need and neither parent did, or if the physician did not identify an item as a need and at least 1 parent did, the physician and the family were considered to be not in agreement. The number of items on which physicians and the family agreed were then summed separately for each of the 4 subgroups and for all items together.

Table 6 contains the R2s and the beta  coefficients for all 5 regression models. The model predicting concordance regarding the need for information for parents, children, and adolescents about their condition(s), treatments, and their long-term implications attained statistical significance (P < .001). Physicians and parents were more likely to agree about these needs for children with neurologic conditions, and for children whose "intensity" was rated higher. With regard to contact needs, the full model approached significance, P = .06. Age was a significant predictor of concordance: the younger the child the more physicians and parents agreed about the need for links with other families that included a child with a chronic condition. Neither parents' nor physicians' ratings of severity predicted concordance in any model.

                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

TABLE 6
Predictors of Concordance Between Parents and Physicians (n = 91): hierarchical regression model, with diagnostic groups entered as a dummy variable in step 1a

    DISCUSSION
Top
Abstract
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References

We have investigated the concordance among 3 adult observers regarding the unmet needs of children with chronic health conditions. We had expected that there would be substantial disagreement between a) mothers and fathers, and b) physicians and parents, regarding both the severity of children's conditions and what additional services would be helpful to children and their families. Our findings suggest instructive patterns both of concordance and of difference among observers.

Mothers and fathers reported a high level of agreement about the severity of their child's condition(s), and about the number and type of needs that were currently insufficiently met, independent of the diagnostic category of the child's condition(s). The only consistent discordance between them reflected mothers' greater desire for social contact for themselves and for their children with other families that included a child with a chronic condition. Programs that address this need have evolved in many forms (eg, Parent-to-Parent in Vermont, Family Ties in Massachusetts, and the national organization Family Voices) and merit the support of pediatricians on behalf of the families they serve together.

Parents of children with multiple different conditions indicated a greater number of insufficiently-met needs than did parents whose children had single or similar conditions. Independent of diagnostic category, parents who rated their child's condition(s) as more severe also indicated a larger number of needs.

Despite a high level of concordance as well between parents and physicians, some consistent patterns of difference are important: physicians rated the severity of children's illnesses as greater, but the extent of their unmet needs as lower than did parents. This pattern did not vary by the diagnostic category of the child's condition(s).

Physicians regularly underestimated parents' apparently insatiable desire for information about the child's chronic condition(s) and its implications. While parents state their desire for more information consistently and independently of severity and diagnostic categories, pediatricians seem to be more aware of this need for information among children with neurologic conditions, and those whose conditions have resulted in greater impact on the family ("intensity"), than among other children. It should be relatively easy for pediatricians to provide resources for parents to obtain appropriate information about their children's condition(s), treatments and their family implications. Some community and regional medical centers have developed information resource centers for families. The World Wide Web has created vast new opportunities for access to information, although its unedited format can also create unanticipated new difficulties. Pediatricians will continue to be called on to provide and to interpret information that can help parents to advocate most effectively for their children's health and development.

Pediatricians appeared to be unaware of how often parents (mothers especially) are interested in being involved in groups for their children and for themselves for the purposes of discussion, networking, and counseling. They similarly did not recognize the frequency with which parents felt a need for better understanding of the familial/genetic implications of their child's condition(s), nor the difficulty parents have in making child care arrangements. Noteworthy is that physicians were considerably less likely than parents to identify a need for care coordination. Physicians identified such a need for fewer than half of the children, while two-thirds of parents stated their need for help in this domain.

That these pediatricians consistently underestimated families' wishes with regard to these issues is particularly striking because the pediatricians who participated in this project are acknowledged to be leaders in their region with regard to their interest in and understanding of the special needs of children with chronic health conditions and their families. They have made various adaptations to their practices to be able to provide special care for these children. The discrepancy we report here is likely therefore to understate the misunderstanding of most pediatricians of the special stresses and desires of the parents of their patients who have chronic conditions.

Several limitations of this study should be kept in mind. First, the sample was drawn from a group of pediatricians with particular interests in the care of children with chronic health conditions. The data should not be interpreted to reflect in any way the "standard of care" evident among pediatricians in general.

Second, selection of children from these pediatric practices was done using billing and coding records and may not represent the full spectrum of children with chronic conditions who are cared for by these pediatricians. The difficulties of identifying research participants in pediatric practices underscore the need for systematic data management software that can be incorporated into practice routines in a sufficiently user-friendly fashion to encourage collaborative research.

Third, the sample for which complete data are available represents only 70% of the originally selected population. Although there is no difference between those parents who agreed to participate and those who did not with regard to the gender, age, or diagnoses of their children, more precise differences among these families could not be ascertained. Thus, it is possible that the sample for which we have data does not accurately represent the true population of children with chronic conditions and their families.

    CONCLUSION
Top
Abstract
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References

These findings have important implications for policy and practice in pediatrics. Even pediatricians who are knowledgeable about and sensitive to the special issues involved in caring for children with special health care needs and who provide a great deal of support and assistance to these families underestimate the unmet needs their patients' parents recognize.

A mechanism must be found to integrate regular communication among parents and physicians about children's and families' long-term needs into the general health care supervision of children with chronic health conditions. For example, as part of the larger project that developed from the study presented here, parents and pediatricians arrange an annual joint planning meeting. In this forum, mothers, fathers, physicians, and nurse practitioners (if involved) present their observations and concerns about the child's and family's current status and outstanding needs. Among them a strategy is formulated to address those needs that the group agrees to be both important and soluble. Arrangements for shared coordination of care often emerge out of these discussions.

Scheduling and financing considerations present a formidable challenge, but should not be allowed to supersede the requirements of comprehensive health care for these vulnerable children. Some third-party payors acknowledge the importance of such a planning encounter by reimbursing physicians using a "care coordination" code. Systematic and universal arrangements for financial risk adjustment and modifications in the organization of practice systems will be necessary to allow primary care practices to meet the complex needs of children and families.

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This project was funded by the W. T. Grant and J. B. Cox Foundations and by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau (Grant No. MCJ-257057).

Many people have contributed to this project. We appreciate very much the efforts of Donna Christian, Eileen MacInnis, and Janet Stanton, RN, PNP, who in various ways were responsible for gathering and assembling the information presented in this article, and to Anne Stoddard, PhD, who provided statistical expertise. Jannette McMenamy contributed her thoughtful perspective, and patience and persistence far beyond our expectations, as we struggled to turn the data into a useful story. We owe a great deal to Virginia Gow, who patiently and faithfully helped us put our findings and ideas into coherent written form.

We are indebted to Richard Antonelli, MD, Betty Madden, PNP, David Tapscott, MD, and Scott Wellman, MD, who had the courage to help us start these explorations in their offices, and Kathleen Cleary, MD, Ingrid Cruse, MD, Martin Feldman, MD, Terry Gingras, MD, David Keller, MD, Jeffrey Lukas, MD, Julie Meyers, MD, and Lisa Mooney, MD, who had the patience to help us finish them. We thank also all of the children and their parents from whom we learned so much.

    FOOTNOTES

a Children were not distributed equally among the 11 participating physicians. These pediatricians each contributed 30 or more children to the final sample; 25 children were patients of 8 different pediatricians. Thus, 4 dummy variables were created, with the 8 pediatricians' patients combined in one group and those of each of the 3 other pediatricians considered as separate groups.

Received for publication Apr 26, 1999; accepted Sep 20, 1999.

Reprint requests to (E.C.P.) University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA 01655. E-mail: ellen.perrin{at}banyan.ummed.edu

    ABBREVIATIONS

SD, standard deviation.

    REFERENCES
Top
Abstract
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
  1. Newacheck PW, Taylor WR Childhood chronic illness: prevalence, severity, and impact. Am J Public Health. 1992; 82:364-371 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Gortmaker SL, Walker DK, Weitzman M, Sobol AM Chronic conditions, socioeconomic risks, and behavioral problems in children and adolescents. Pediatrics. 1990; 85:267-276 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  3. Pless IB, Pinkerton P. Chronic Childhood Disorder: Promoting Patterns of Adjustment. London, England: Henry Kimpton; 1975
  4. Walker DK, Epstein SG, Taylor AB, Tuttle GA Perceived needs of families with children who have chronic health conditions. Child Health Care. 1989; 18:196-201
  5. Kanthor H, Pless B, Satterwhite B, Myers G Areas of responsibility in the health care of multiply handicapped children. Pediatrics. 1974; 54:779-785 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  6. Liptak GS, Revell GM Community physicians' role in case management of children with chronic illnesses. Pediatrics. 1989; 84:465-471 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  7. Perrin EC, Newacheck P, Pless IB, Issues involved in the definition and classification of chronic health conditions. Pediatrics. 1993; 14:11-36 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  8. Weitzman M. Medical services. In: Hobbs N, Perrin JM, eds. Issues in the Care of Children With Chronic Illness. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass Publishers; 1985
  9. Diehl SF, Moffitt KA, Wade SM Focus group interview with parents of children with medically complex needs: an intimate look at their perceptions and feelings. Child Health Care. 1991; 20:l70-l78
  10. Horner MM, Rawlins P, Giles K How parents of children with chronic conditions perceive their own needs. Am J Matern Child Nurs. 1987; 12:40-43
  11. Bailey DB, Blasco PM, Simeonsson RJ Needs expressed by mothers and fathers of young children with disabilities. Am J Ment Retard. 1992; 97:1-10 [Medline]
  12. Dittmer ID, Romans-Clarkson SE A critique of a New Zealand health care service by parents of handicapped preschool children. N Engl Med J 1986; 99:673-675
  13. Sloper P, Turner S Service needs of families of children with severe physical disability. Child Care Health Dev. 1992; 18:259-282 [CrossRef][Medline]
  14. McInerny T The role of the general pediatrician in coordinating the care of children with chronic illness. Pediatr Clin North Am. 1984; 31:199-209 [Medline]
  15. Ireys HT, Grason HA, Guyer B Assuring quality of care for children with special needs in managed care organizations: roles for pediatricians. Pediatrics. 1996; 98:178-185 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  16. Marchetti F, Bonati M, Marfisi RM, LaGamba G, Biasini GC, Tognoni G Parental and primary care physicians' views on the management of chronic diseases: a study in Italy. Acta Paediatr. 1995; 84:1165-1172 [Medline]
  17. Eiser C, Havermans T, Pancer M, Eiser JR Adjustment to chronic disease in relation to age and gender: mothers' and fathers' reports of their children's behavior. J Pediatr Psychol. 1992; 17:261-275 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  18. Dragone MA Perspectives of chronically ill adolescents and parents on health care needs. Pediatr Nurs. 1990; 16:45-50 [Medline]
  19. Kennedy SE, Garcia Martin SD, Kelley JM, et al Identification of medical and nonmedical needs of adolescents and young adults with spina bifida and their families: a preliminary study. Child Health Care. 1998; 27:47-61
  20. Cadman D, Boyle M, Szatmari P, Offord DR Chronic illness, disability, and mental and social well-being: findings of the Ontario Child Health Study. Pediatrics. 1987; 79:805-813 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  21. Drotar D, Bush M. Mental health issues and services. In: Hobbs N, Perrin JM, eds. Issues in the Care of Children With Chronic Illness. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass Publishers; 1985
  22. Eiser C Psychological effects of chronic disease. J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 1990; 31:85-98 [Medline]
  23. Lavigne JV, Faier-Routman J Psychological adjustment to pediatric physical disorders: a meta-analytic review. J Pediatr Psychol. 1992; 17:133-157 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  24. Wallander JL, Varni JW, Babani L, Banis HT, Wilcox KT Children with chronic physical disorders: maternal reports of their psychological adjustment. J Pediatr Psychol. 1988; 13:197-212 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  25. Bauman LF, Drotar D, Leventhal JM, Perrin EC, Pless IB A review of psychosocial interventions for children with chronic health conditions. Pediatrics 1997; 100:244-251 [Free Full Text]
  26. Kibby MY, Tyc VL, Mulhern RK Effectiveness of psychological intervention for children and adolescents with chronic medical illness: a meta-analysis. Clin Psychol Rev. 1998; 18:103-117 [CrossRef][Medline]
  27. Stein REK, Jessop DJ A noncategorical approach to chronic childhood illness. Public Health Rep 1982; 97:354-362 [Medline]
  28. Stein REK, Jessop DJ What diagnosis does not tell: the case for a noncategorical approach to chronic illness in childhood. Soc Sci Med. 1989; 29:769-778
  29. Horn JD, Feldman HM, Ploof DL Parent and professional perceptions about stress and coping strategies during a child's lengthy hospitalization. Soc Work Health Care. 1995; 21:107-127 [CrossRef][Medline]
  30. King G, King S, Rosenbaum P, Goffin R Family-centered caregiving and well-being of parents of children with disabilities: linking process with outcome. J Pediatr Psychol. 1999; 24:41-53 [Free Full Text]
  31. Greenfield S, Kaplan SH, Ware JE Expanding patient involvement in care: effects on patients' outcomes. Ann Intern Med. 1985; 102:520-528
  32. Kasper JF, Mulley AG Jr, Wennberg JE Developing shared decision-making programs to improve the quality of health care. QRB Qual Rev Bull. 1992; 18:183-190 [Medline]
  33. Kaplan SH, Gandek B, Greenfield S, Rogers W, Ware JE Patient and visit characteristics related to physicians' participatory decision-making style. Results from the Medical Outcomes Study. Med Care. 1995; 33:1176-1187 [CrossRef][Medline]
  34. Harrison H The principles for family-centered neonatal care. Pediatrics. 1993; 92:643-650 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  35. Shelton TL, Jeppson ES, Johnson BH. Family-Centered Care for Children With Special Health Care Needs. 2nd ed. Washington, DC: Association for the Care of Children's Health; 1987
  36. Achenbach TM, McConaughy SH, Howell LT Child/adolescent behavioral and emotional problems: implications of cross-informant correlations for situational specificity. Psychol Bull 1987; 101:213-232 [CrossRef][Medline]
  37. O'Sullivan P, Mahoney G, Robinson C Perceptions of pediatricians' helpfulness: a national study of mothers of young disabled children. Dev Med Child Neurol. 1992; 34:1064-1071 [Medline]
  38. Bailey DB, Blasco PM Parents' perspectives on a written survey of family needs. J Early Intervention 1990; 14:196-203
  39. Deber RB, Kraetschmer N, Irvine J What role do patients wish to play in treatment decision making? Arch Intern Med 1996; 156:1414-1420 [Abstract]
  40. Bishop YMM, Feinberg SE, Holland PW. Discrete Multivariate Analysis. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press; 1975

Pediatrics (ISSN 0031 4005). Copyright ©2000 by the American Academy of Pediatrics



This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Arch Pediatr Adolesc MedHome page
S. Nageswaran
Respite Care for Children With Special Health Care Needs
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, January 1, 2009; 163(1): 49 - 54.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
PediatricsHome page
C. J. Stille, W. A. Primack, T. J. McLaughlin, and R. C. Wasserman
Parents as Information Intermediaries Between Primary Care and Specialty Physicians
Pediatrics, December 1, 2007; 120(6): 1238 - 1246.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
ChestHome page
R. S. Irwin and N. D. Richardson
Patient-Focused Care: Using the Right Tools
Chest, July 1, 2006; 130(1_suppl): 73S - 82S.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
PediatricsHome page
J. E. Farmer, M. J. Clark, A. Sherman, W. E. Marien, and T. J. Selva
Comprehensive Primary Care for Children With Special Health Care Needs in Rural Areas
Pediatrics, September 1, 2005; 116(3): 649 - 656.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
ANN INTERN MEDHome page
C. J. Stille, A. Jerant, D. Bell, D. Meltzer, and J. G. Elmore
Coordinating Care across Diseases, Settings, and Clinicians: A Key Role for the Generalist in Practice
Ann Intern Med, April 19, 2005; 142(8): 700 - 708.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
J Pediatr PsycholHome page
J. E. Farmer, W. E. Marien, M. J. Clark, A. Sherman, and T. J. Selva
Primary Care Supports for Children with Chronic Health Conditions: Identifying and Predicting Unmet Family Needs
J. Pediatr. Psychol., July 1, 2004; 29(5): 355 - 367.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Arch Pediatr Adolesc MedHome page
M. H. Young, J. M. McMenamy, and E. C. Perrin
Parent Advisory Groups in Pediatric Practices: Parents' and Professionals' Perceptions
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, June 1, 2001; 155(6): 692 - 698.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

eLetters:

Read all eLetters

The need for parents with children with chronic disease to have counseling support services
Mary O'Connor Harris
Pediatrics Online, 21 Feb 2000 [Full text]

This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow View responses
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Right arrow Citation Map
Services
Right arrow E-mail this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Add to My File Cabinet
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via CrossRef
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow