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Parents' understanding and experiences of blood component transfusion in the neonatal intensive care unit: A qualitative study
Date Issued
2023-12
Date Available
2025-05-26T15:36:17Z
Abstract
Aim: Blood component transfusion is a common intervention in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Parents consent on their babies' behalf. This study aimed to explore parents' understandings and experiences of consenting and the subsequent blood transfusion. Methods: A “low inference” qualitative descriptive semi-structured interview approach was utilised. Grounded theory was employed. Parents described their memories of babies' transfusions, their responses to the consent process and assessed the written information they were given. Results: A purposive sample of 17 parents whose babies required blood transfusion in the NICU participated. Parents talked about their initial fears of transfusion, later replaced by confidence in the process and results of transfusion and trust in the healthcare professional team. The main themes elicited by the interviews were parents' expectations and outcomes of transfusion, parents' prior and current opinions of transfusion, parents trust in healthcare professionals and how parents would like to receive information about transfusions in the NICU. Conclusion:
Parents in our study trust information from the healthcare professionals caring for their baby and would like more specific information about how blood transfusion will impact their baby, in a variety of means. Parents felt that blood transfusions were beneficial for their babies.
Parents in our study trust information from the healthcare professionals caring for their baby and would like more specific information about how blood transfusion will impact their baby, in a variety of means. Parents felt that blood transfusions were beneficial for their babies.
Sponsorship
Health Service Executive
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Acta Paediatrica
Volume
112
Issue
12
Start Page
2493
End Page
2502
Copyright (Published Version)
2023 The Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0803-5253
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Acta Paediatrica - 2023 - Moore.pdf
Size
755.79 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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