Litcius/Paper detail

Engagement of Families in the Care of Hospitalized Pediatric Patients: A Scoping Review

Teresa Jerofke‐Owen, Natalie S. McAndrew, Karen Gralton, Joan P. Totka, Marianne Weiss, Alissa Fial, Kathleen J. Sawin

2021Journal of Family Nursing22 citationsDOI

Abstract

This scoping review was conducted to examine the range, nature, and extent of the published family engagement literature specific to the pediatric acute care setting to highlight future research and practice development opportunities. Included studies ( N = 247) revealed global relevance. Engagement strategies ranged from more passive such as allowing/encouraging families to be present at the bedside to more active strategies aimed at promoting mutual and reciprocal nurse–patient interactions. Family engagement is distinguished by a mutually beneficial partnership of families with health care team members and care organizations. Future research in the area of family engagement in pediatric nursing should focus on determining the core engaging health professional behaviors and engaged parent outcomes; extending the knowledge base related to mutually beneficial partnerships between families and health care teams; developing effectiveness studies to determine the optimal engaging actions by teams to achieve parent engagement; and measuring the influence of engagement on parent and infant/child outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineFamily medicineNursingFamily and Patient Care in Intensive Care UnitsInfant Development and Preterm CareFamily and Disability Support Research