Co-design of a paediatric post-trauma electronic psychosocial screen

To optimise care pathways and provide greater transparency of the psychosocial needs of injured children after hospital discharge by extending post-discharge psychosocial screening to children admitted with traumatic injury for ≥24 h. This mixed-methods study used a co-design approach informed by th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pediatric nursing 2024-05, Vol.76, p.52-60
Hauptverfasser: Griffin, Bronwyn R., Trenoweth, Kate, Dimanopoulos, Tanesha A., De Young, Alexandra C., Cobham, Vanessa E., Williams, Hayley, Kimble, Roy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To optimise care pathways and provide greater transparency of the psychosocial needs of injured children after hospital discharge by extending post-discharge psychosocial screening to children admitted with traumatic injury for ≥24 h. This mixed-methods study used a co-design approach informed by the Experience-Based Co-design (EBCD) framework. Interviews with carers were used to evaluate experiences and generate views on psychosocial support interventions. Online surveys by international child psychologists' indicated preferences for a psychosocial screening tool, and clinician-stakeholder consensus meetings facilitated the development of an electronic post-injury psychosocial screening tool. Carers found the initial year of follow-up from trauma family support services helpful, appreciating the hospital connection. Flexible follow-up timings and additional resources were mentioned, and most carers were interested in participating in an electronic screening activity to predict their child's coping after injury. Child trauma experts recommended including several screening tools, and the multidisciplinary paediatric trauma service and study investigators collaborated over a year to workshop and reach a consensus on the screening tool and follow-up process. The multidisciplinary team co-designed an electronic psychosocial screening and follow-up process for families with children with traumatic injuries. This tool improves the visibility of injured children's psychosocial needs post-injury and potentially aids clinical targeted resource allocation for trauma family support services. The study emphasises the significance of specialised psychosocial screening tools in paediatric nursing, especially in trauma care, for understanding patients' psychosocial needs, tailoring follow-up plans, and promoting a patient-centred approach. •Research emphasises need for routine psychosocial screening post-paediatric trauma.•Carers expressed interest in electronic screening to predict child coping after injury.•Multidisciplinary team co-designed an electronic psychosocial screening for carers.•Web-based screen aids visibility of psychosocial needs, optimising resource provision.•Paediatric nurses are vital in tailoring follow-up plans for trauma patients.
ISSN:0882-5963
1532-8449
DOI:10.1016/j.pedn.2024.02.004