Wray, J;
Ridout, D;
Jones, A;
Davis, P;
Wellman, P;
Rodrigues, W;
Hudson, E;
... Brown, KL; + view all
(2024)
The Impact of Morbidities Following Pediatric Cardiac Surgery on Family Functioning and Parent Quality of Life.
Pediatric Cardiology
, 45
pp. 14-23.
10.1007/s00246-023-03312-9.
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Abstract
We previously selected and defined nine important post-operative morbidities linked to paediatric cardiac surgery, and prospectively measured their incidence following 3090 consecutive operations. Our aim was to study the impact of these morbidities on family functioning and parental quality of life over 6 months in a subset of cases. As part of a prospective case matched study in five of the ten children’s cardiac centers in the UK, we compared outcomes for parents of children who had a ‘single morbidity’, ‘multiple morbidities’, ‘extracorporeal life support (ECLS)’ or ‘no morbidity’. Outcomes were evaluated using the PedsQL Family impact module (FIM) at 6 weeks and 6 months post-surgery. Outcomes were modelled using mixed effects regression, with adjustment for case mix and clustering within centers. We recruited 340 patients with morbidity (60% of eligible patients) and 326 with no morbidity over 21 months. In comparison to the reference group of ‘no morbidity’, after adjustment for case mix, at 6 weeks parent health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and total FIM sores were lower (worse) only for ECLS (p < 0.005), although a higher proportion of parents in both the ECLS and multi-morbidity groups had low/very low scores (p <.05). At 6 months, parent outcomes had improved for all groups but parent HRQoL and total score for ECLS remained lower than the ‘no morbidity’ group (p <.05) and a higher proportion of families had low or very low scores in the ECLS (70%) group (p <.01). Post-operative morbidities impact parent HRQoL and aspects of family functioning early after surgery, with this impact lessening by 6 months. Families of children who experience post-operative morbidities should be offered timely psychological support.
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