The Concept of Child-Centred Care in Healthcare: A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Aims and Objectives
- How has the concept of child-centred care developed?
- What is the applicability of child-centred care and what are its limitations?
- How does the concept of child-centred care benefit and inform children’s healthcare?
2. Methods
2.1. Inclusion Criteria
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Screening and Eligibility
- The focus of the paper was adequately on child-centred care and not FCC;
- There was sufficient content relevant to defining child-centred care on a practical or conceptual level, including papers that may not have used the term child-centred care but whose content was relevant to the germinal concept of child-centred care;
- The outcomes and setting were relevant to this scoping review.
2.4. Data Extraction and Charting
3. Results
3.1. Demographics of Included Papers
3.2. Overview of Discursive Papers
3.2.1. Dates of Publication
3.2.2. Authorship
3.2.3. Discursive Focus
3.3. Overview of Empirical Papers
3.3.1. Dates of Publication
3.3.2. Countries Data Generated from
3.3.3. Study Design
3.3.4. Level of Child Involvement
3.3.5. Sample Size and Characteristics
3.4. Themes
3.4.1. Agency
3.4.2. Participation
3.4.3. Decision Making
3.4.4. Communication
3.4.5. Impact
4. Discussion
4.1. What Constitutes the Concept of Child-Centred Care in Healthcare?
4.2. How Has the Concept of Child-Centred Care Developed?
4.3. What Is the Applicability of Child-Centred Care and What Are Its Limitations?
4.4. How Does the Concept of Child-Centred Care Benefit and Inform Children’s Healthcare?
4.5. Strengths and Limitations of the Review
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author, Year, Country of Origin | Aim | Key Points |
---|---|---|
Al-Motlaq et al., 2021 International [29] | To create an international position statement about child and family-centred care (CFCC). | An international position statement of the INCFCC on the provision of CFCC during the era of COVID-19, as children and families are most likely to be affected due to restrictions being placed on family presence and involvement in the care of their children. |
Coyne et al., 2016 Ireland, Sweden [3] | To argue for a conceptual move from family-centred care (FCC) to a child-centred care approach and the implications for clinical nursing practice. | A child-centred care approach incorporates the rights of the child in all aspects of healthcare delivery in conjunction with the needs of their family. Key elements are protection, promotion and participation. A child-centred care approach requires the inclusion of the child’s perspective; a child’s needs must be considered in each situation and their rights to negotiate and choose is crucial. Children’s participation is a process that evolves over time and involves shared responsibility or negotiation of responsibility throughout childhood. CCC is underpinned by the concepts of trust, respect, autonomy and self-determination. A child-centred approach entails recognition and focusing on children’s agency and rights and the valuing of children’s voices, experiences and participation. |
Coyne et al., 2018 Ireland, Sweden [4] | To identify the antecedents, attributes and relationship between family, person and child-centred care using a concept analysis. | Antecedents: The child is in the centre of thinking and practice. A child's perspective with joined participation and partnership, considering cultural and social aspects, strives for ethical symmetry, situated by using skills and strategies to recognise different ways of communication and listen to the child’s perspective. Attributes: Individualised own rights, dignity and respect, closeness with the family, social actor, own voice, consider competence and own engagement as an active agent. Consequences: The child's voice is heard, and each child’s competence and their own engagement as an active agent are respected. |
Ford et al., 2018 Australia, New Zealand, UK [1] | To explore the concept of CCC and its potential theoretical alignment with an ecological approach to healthcare. | CCC has the potential to complement or extend traditional FCC, by placing children in a more prominent and central position than that which they currently hold within healthcare. |
Foster 2015 New Zealand [30] | To propose a new paediatric model of care called family and child-centred care (FCCC). | An amalgamation of FCC and CCC needs to occur to create an FCC model, that includes both the characteristics of FCC and CCC, where the family and child are visible, at the forefront and equal in healthcare provision. This model then needs to be used by the government, organisations and institutions to plan, deliver and evaluate child healthcare provision. |
Foster and Shields 2020 New Zealand, Australia [31] | To discuss different models of care for children and families and their components, philosophies and principles. | Core concepts of CCC (common to CFCC, PFCC and FIC) include respect, participation, partnership, information and consent. Core differences between the different approaches are whether the child, person and/or family as a unit are at the forefront. Agree that CCC occurs when ‘children and their interests need to be at the centre of our thinking and our practice, the inclusion of children and young people as active participants in their care’ (Carter et al., 2014). FCC and CCC are irrevocably interconnected and require a fluidic reciprocal interaction from both perspectives. Hence, a CFCC model is proposed by the authors. |
Gerlach and Varcoe 2021 Canada [32] | To examine dominant discourses on CFCC in the context of families and children who are at greater risk of health inequities in wealthy countries. | Taking account of the growing recognition for socially responsive and inclusive healthcare approaches that mitigate the impacts of childhood adversity across the life course, there is an immediate need for research on how CFCC can be inclusive of and responsive to families and children who are vulnerable to health problems and healthcare inequities. |
Lake, 2014 South Africa [33] | To share the lessons learned from delivering a short course in children’s rights and child law for health professionals in South Africa. | Integrating a child-rights approach into pre and in-service education provides a potentially powerful framework that nurses can draw on to give effect to children’s rights and legal entitlements, promote child health, improve quality, strengthen Intersectoral collaboration and an informed re-engineering of children’s services. |
Shields, 2017 Australia [15] | To caution readers that we do not know what FCC is despite having used it for 30 years, and we need to understand CCC before we move to it. | Discussion draws on work by other authors. CCC views the child as the central person in healthcare interactions and children are active agents in their healthcare. They have the right to participate and need to be an integral part of partnerships in care. The family and parents remain central to the child’s health and well being. The child is an individual and their needs are paramount (Carter et al., 2014). Children are to be regarded as respected, singular agents who can represent and negotiate their own experiences and wishes (Coyne et al., 2016). Child-centred care (like FCC) sounds good, but it would be unethical to universally apply it to all children’s healthcare situations unless we know it works. International collaboration is needed to ensure a better understanding of the concept. |
Söderbäck et al., 2011 Sweden, Ireland [23] | To discuss the differences between a child's perspective and the child’s perspective in healthcare settings. | No definition of CCC is presented, although the authors talk of a child-centred approach. Discussion on the child’s perspective includes features/principles of CCC. A FCC approach needs to be redirected toward a child-centred care approach that incorporates the rights of the child to participate in all aspects of healthcare delivery in conjunction with the needs of their family. The paper refers to Shier’s (2001) five-level model: irrespective of age, the child is listened to; the child is supported in expressing their views; the child’s views are taken into account; the child is involved in the decision-making process; and the child can share power and responsibility in the decision making. |
Author, Year, Country of Origin | Aim | Study Population | Intervention Type | Methodology | Level of Child Involvement | Important Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carlsson et al., 2021 Sweden [34] | To explore the impact of using an eHealth service (Sisom) to gain the children’s perspectives during their healthcare appointments. | Children (n = 16), aged 6–13 yrs, treated for different diseases. | The impact of using an eHealth service. | Constructivist grounded theory | Authentic | Implementing the use of Sisom (Norwegian acronym meaning ‘tell it how it is’) as a way to make children’s needs and preferences explicitly visible for decision making in practice and thereby supporting the further development of child-centred care in practice. The communication space thus enabled the children to voice their opinions on aspects of care which made the parents and the healthcare professionals listen to them and enabled a greater understanding and a higher level of participation for the children. Sisom can strengthen children’s empowerment and support the requirements for developing ways to make children’s needs and preferences explicitly visible in decision making in practice and thus support the ambition of furthering the development of child-centred care in practice. |
Carnevale et al., 2017 Canada [35] | To examine how a relational ethics framework can improve clinical practice. | Children (n = 2), aged 24 yrs and 12 yrs. | None | Case study | Marginal | Conventional practices inadequately attend to the multiple ethical concerns encountered by these children, their families and the HCPs working with them. A relational ethics framework can promote clinical practices that are ethically attuned to the complexity of this population’s needs. |
Carter, 2005 UK [36] | To explore the children’s/siblings’ perceptions of the (Salford) Diana Team. | Families (n = 5), involving children (n = 10), aged 2–13 yrs. | None | Qualitative participant inquiry | Authentic | The sick child’s siblings highlighted that attention to their needs was important. This study shows the value of including children in research about children’s services. Children use parents as their gold standard for care and they are clear about the skills and attributes they value about ‘outsiders’ who provide care to their family. |
Castor, 2021 Sweden [37] | To describe nurses’ experiences of a child-centred family-guided intervention of obesity, targeting children identified as overweight and their caregivers. | Nurses (n = 13). | Child-centred family-guided interventions aiming to support families towards a healthier lifestyle. | Qualitative, descriptive inductive | Marginal | Emotional and practical challenges in performing CCHD still remained among nurses after customised training, which might include the child’s rights to be involved in their own care when the child was identified as overweight. Training for nurses, including lectures and tutorials, was found to increase the quality and professionalism of performing CCHD by providing structure, tools and tutorial support. Customised training and illustrations can support nurses when performing a structured intervention such as child-centred health dialogues. |
Coombes et al., 2022 UK [38] | Children and young people (n = 26) aged 5–17 yrs, parents (n = 40), siblings (n = 13) aged 5–17 yrs, health and social care professionals (n = 15) and commissioners (n = 15). | None | Qualitative, inductive | Authentic | A child-centred approach to care needs to take an individual and holistic view of the child that ensures their physical, emotional, social, practical and spiritual needs are addressed. A child-centred approach to care for children with life-limiting conditions should incorporate support for the family, while ensuring the child remains the focus of care and their needs and interests are at the centre of care and decisions. Children as young as five wanted to be informed, supporting a child-centred approach where the child is, where able, an active participant. | |
Derwig et al., 2021 Sweden [39] | To test the feasibility of a Child-centred Health Dialogue model for primary prevention of obesity. | Children (n = 785); intervention (n = 203), control (n = 582). | Child-centred Health Dialogue | Non-randomised quasi-experimental cluster design | Authentic | This study demonstrates that a child-centred, multicomponent, interactive intervention for the promotion of healthy lifestyles and primary prevention of obesity for all 4-year-old children participating in Child Health Services is feasible on a small scale. |
Derwig et al., 2021 Sweden [40] | To explore the experiences of children participating in CCHD. | Children (n = 21), aged 4 yrs. | Child-centred Health Dialogue (CCHD) | Qualitative, inductive | Authentic | 4-year-old children given the opportunity to speak for themselves—elucidating the child’s perspective—interpreted the health messages in a different way than the intended meaning of the illustrations developed by adults. Findings are important for the improvement of CCHD and underline the utmost importance of including children in research on health promotion. 4-year-old children can take an active role in their health and are capable of making health information meaningful. |
Foster and Whitehead, 2019 New Zealand, Australia [41] | To explore the lived experience of hospitalized school-aged children admitted to a paediatric high-dependency unit to gain insight into child-centred care. | Children (n = 26), aged 5–15 yrs. | None | Qualitative, interpretive phenomenological | Marginal | Defines CCC as when the child is central, at the forefront and the actor and co-constructor of care delivery within the context of the family and community. Core principles of CCC include the child being seen as a social being and a key agent in family partnerships and collaborations with staff where dignity, respect, honesty, privacy and opportunities to make decisions about their care are promoted. Children valued safety, respect, consultation, honesty, dignity, privacy and participation as key agents in family partnerships and collaborations with adults. Further research from a global and cultural perspective is required to understand the relationship between children, parents and staff, where communication, demography and health outcomes are explored from a CCC and FCC approach. |
Gibbs et al., 2020 New Zealand [42] | To examine the lived experiences of nurses who care for children and their families admitted to hospital with a non-accidental head injury. | Nurses (n = 6). | None | Qualitative, hermeneutic phenomenological | Authentic | A child-centred approach places the child at the forefront of care, it recognises their rights to be recognised as active social agents and puts the child at the centre in relation to care planning. A child-centred approach does not negate the role of the family but positions the family differently in relation to being one of the many influencing ecological systems influencing the child’s health and well being (Ford et al., 2018). |
Gondek et al., 2017 UK [43] | To review factors influencing person-centred care in mental health services for children, young people and families examining perspectives from professionals, service users and carers. | Papers (n = 23). | None | Systematic review | Marginal | The key recommendations of the review to improve provision of person-centred care are providing professionals with more training in using the approach, supporting them to use it flexibly to meet the unique needs of service users, whilst also being responsive to times when it may be less appropriate, and improving both the quantity and quality of information for service users. |
Lipman et al., 2012 USA [44] | To learn how to serve families with children with diabetes in a more culturally effective manner. | Parents (n = 799). | None | Secondary data analysis | Marginal | There is a paucity of research on the goals and priorities of paediatric diabetes care from the perspective of parents from diverse racial backgrounds. Asking families about the type of care they prefer may help to improve the design and delivery of services in a culturally competent, effective manner. |
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Carter, B.; Young, S.; Ford, K.; Campbell, S. The Concept of Child-Centred Care in Healthcare: A Scoping Review. Pediatr. Rep. 2024, 16, 114-134. https://doi.org/10.3390/pediatric16010012
Carter B, Young S, Ford K, Campbell S. The Concept of Child-Centred Care in Healthcare: A Scoping Review. Pediatric Reports. 2024; 16(1):114-134. https://doi.org/10.3390/pediatric16010012
Chicago/Turabian StyleCarter, Bernie, Sarah Young, Karen Ford, and Steven Campbell. 2024. "The Concept of Child-Centred Care in Healthcare: A Scoping Review" Pediatric Reports 16, no. 1: 114-134. https://doi.org/10.3390/pediatric16010012
APA StyleCarter, B., Young, S., Ford, K., & Campbell, S. (2024). The Concept of Child-Centred Care in Healthcare: A Scoping Review. Pediatric Reports, 16(1), 114-134. https://doi.org/10.3390/pediatric16010012