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      Bridging the divide between families and health professionals’ perspectives on family‐centred care

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          Abstract

          Objectives  To describe and discuss key findings from a recent research project that challenge an increasingly prevalent theme, apparent in both family‐centred care research and practice, of conceptualizing family‐centred care as shifting care, care management, and advocacy responsibilities to families. The purpose of the research, from which these findings emerged, was to develop a conceptualization of family‐centred care grounded in the experiences of families and direct health‐care providers.

          Design  Qualitative research methods, following the grounded theory tradition, were used to develop a conceptual framework that described the dimensions of the concept of family‐centred care and their interrelationships, in the substantive area of children's developmental services. This article reports on and extends key findings from this grounded theory study, in light of current trends in the literature.

          Setting and participants  The substantive area that served as the setting for the research was developmental services at a children's hospital in Alberta, Canada. Data was collected through focus groups and individual interviews with 37 parents of children diagnosed with a developmental problem and 16 frontline health‐care providers.

          Findings  Key findings from this research project do not support the current emphasis in family‐centred care research and practice on conceptualizing family‐centred care as the shifting of care, care management, and advocacy responsibilities to families. Rather, what emerged was that parents want to work truly collaboratively with health‐care providers in making treatment decisions and on implementing a dynamic care plan that will work best for child and family.

          Discussion and conclusions  A definition of collaboration is provided, and the nature of collaborative relationships described. Contributing factors to the difficulty in establishing true collaborative relationships between families and health‐care professionals, where the respective roles to be played by health‐care professionals and families are jointly determined, are discussed. In light of these findings we strongly advocate for the re‐examination of current family‐centred care policy and practice.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Health Expect
          Health Expect
          10.1111/(ISSN)1369-7625
          HEX
          Health Expectations : An International Journal of Public Participation in Health Care and Health Policy
          Blackwell Science Ltd (Oxford, UK )
          1369-6513
          1369-7625
          15 February 2005
          March 2005
          : 8
          : 1 ( doiID: 10.1111/hex.2005.8.issue-1 )
          : 74-85
          Affiliations
          [ 1 ]Research Associate, Department of Community Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine
          [ 2 ]Associate Professor, Department of Community Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine
          [ 3 ]Adjunct Associate Professor, Faculties of Kinesiology and Nursing
          [ 4 ]Director, Institute for Gender Research
          [ 5 ]Research Associate, Department of Community Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada
          Author notes
          [*]Dr Wilfreda E. Thurston 
Department of Community Health Sciences 
Faculty of Medicine 
University of Calgary 
3330 Hospital Dr NW 
Calgary 
Alberta 
T2N 4N1 
Canada 
E‐mail: thurston@ 123456ucalgary.ca
          Article
          PMC5060268 PMC5060268 5060268 HEX319
          10.1111/j.1369-7625.2005.00319.x
          5060268
          15713173
          5b65b87c-8519-4e40-bc8a-33c8d737aa83
          History
          Page count
          Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Pages: 12
          Categories
          Family‐centred Care
          Custom metadata
          2.0
          March 2005
          Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:4.9.4 mode:remove_FC converted:06.10.2016

          client–professional relationships,collaboration,family‐centred care,policy,responsibility

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