Quality of life in the voice of children who depend on health technologies: Mixed methods study

To examine the quality of life of children who depend on health technologies as expressed in their own words. A parallel and convergent mixed methods design was employed with 30 aged five to 12 year old children who depend on health technologies. Data collection was done through a characterization f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pediatric nursing 2023-11, Vol.73, p.e83-e92
Hauptverfasser: Neves, Eliane Tatsch, Silva, Júlia Heinz da, Urbanetto, Janete de Souza, Buboltz, Fernanda Luisa, Kegler, Jaquiele Jaciára, Ribeiro, Caroline Félix, Oliveira, Diúlia Calegari de, Lorenzini, Elisiane
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To examine the quality of life of children who depend on health technologies as expressed in their own words. A parallel and convergent mixed methods design was employed with 30 aged five to 12 year old children who depend on health technologies. Data collection was done through a characterization form, Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 4.0 questionnaire with the total sample in quantitative phase; semi-structured interviews with a subset of nine participants in qualitative phase. Quantitative and qualitative data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and deductive thematic content analyses, respectively. Findings from PedsQL 4.0 showed that quality of life for children who depend on health technologies is average. However, data integration through mixed methods showed that this average goes beyond quantitative data through hearing the children's own voices. The results from data integration pointed out that children recognize their limitations and adapt to them; what most affects their quality of life is the emotional domain; children reported suffering prejudice due to their physical limitations; and that the school positively impacts their quality of life. Data integration highlighted that children acknowledge their limitations and pain generated by these devices. Concerns about the future and the ability to do things that other children the same age can do was the most impactful aspect on their quality of life. Nursing care plans should consider that what affects most children who depend on health technologies' quality of life is anxiety for the future of being incapacitated or dependent. •Nursing care plans should consider that what most affects technology-dependent children's quality of life is fear of their own future.•Data integration through mixed methods made it possible to examine the quality of life of these children beyond to quantitative data.•Concerns about the future are one important aspect of this children’s quality of life.
ISSN:0882-5963
1532-8449
DOI:10.1016/j.pedn.2023.07.017