Technological lifelines: the everyday lived complexities of dependence and care of pediatric long-term tracheostomy

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Title: Technological lifelines: the everyday lived complexities of dependence and care of pediatric long-term tracheostomy
Authors: Ledin, Ellinor Rydhamn, Fasterius, Linda, Björling, Gunilla, Docent, Eriksson, Andrea, Mattson, Janet
Source: Disability and Rehabilitation. 47(14):3687-3695
Subject Terms: Tracheostomy, parent, child, pediatrics, neonatology, interaction, everyday life
Description: PurposeAs the group of technology-dependent children with long-term tracheostomy continues to expand, we aimed to explore parents' lived experience of everyday life with a child dependent on long-term tracheostomy.Materials and methodsSix parents of four children were interviewed and the transcripts analyzed using Giorgi's descriptive phenomenology.ResultsAll aspects of everyday life, parent-child interaction, and interaction with the surrounding outside world were affected by technology dependency. Parents played an active role by acting both as a protective shield between the outside world and the child and as an enabling bridge to help the child interact with the outside world. The active and involved role of parents is interwoven in all aspects, levels, and directions of interaction and everyday life. The lived experiences can be described in four themes: caution and risk awareness due to technology, meeting the demands of technology dependence, strained and constrained by technology dependence, and conflicted feelings about technology dependence.ConclusionsLong-term tracheostomy and technology-dependency affect and shape everyday life. Practical implications from the study suggest that re-design and co-design between all stakeholders involved are needed to support parental well-being, coping and enhance patient safety for this growing population and their parents.
File Description: print
Access URL: https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-66713
https://doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2024.2428372
Database: SwePub
Description
Abstract:PurposeAs the group of technology-dependent children with long-term tracheostomy continues to expand, we aimed to explore parents' lived experience of everyday life with a child dependent on long-term tracheostomy.Materials and methodsSix parents of four children were interviewed and the transcripts analyzed using Giorgi's descriptive phenomenology.ResultsAll aspects of everyday life, parent-child interaction, and interaction with the surrounding outside world were affected by technology dependency. Parents played an active role by acting both as a protective shield between the outside world and the child and as an enabling bridge to help the child interact with the outside world. The active and involved role of parents is interwoven in all aspects, levels, and directions of interaction and everyday life. The lived experiences can be described in four themes: caution and risk awareness due to technology, meeting the demands of technology dependence, strained and constrained by technology dependence, and conflicted feelings about technology dependence.ConclusionsLong-term tracheostomy and technology-dependency affect and shape everyday life. Practical implications from the study suggest that re-design and co-design between all stakeholders involved are needed to support parental well-being, coping and enhance patient safety for this growing population and their parents.
ISSN:09638288
14645165
DOI:10.1080/09638288.2024.2428372