Home Care Services for Sick Children. Family, healthcare and health-economic perspectives
- Författare
- Castor, Charlotte
- Titel
- Home Care Services for Sick Children. Family, healthcare and health-economic perspectives
- Utgivningsår
- 2019
- Stad
- Lund
- Utgivare
- Lunds universitet
- Sidor
- 93
- Nyckelord
- Home care service, child, family, healthcare professionals, healthcare costs, childood illness, experiences
- Sammanfattning
Dissertation
Families with sick children often prefer home care to hospital care, and home care services (HCS)
are increasing worldwide with limited evidence on how to provide high quality HCS in different
settings. This thesis aims to provide a comprehensive view of HCS for sick children when provided
by county-based HCS organized to care for adults and children.
A convergent mixed methods design with data-collection 2015–2019 was used. Phenomenographic
analysis of interviews with 36 HCS healthcare professionals showed that caring for children was a
challenging but rewarding task. Hermeneutic phenomenology was used to analyse 37 family
member's lived experience of HCS as a possibility to strengthen family life and health when trustful
alliances were built with HCS healthcare professionals. A review of referrals to HCS during a threeyear period showed that 171 children with various ages, diagnoses and caring needs received HCS.
Calculations of one year's healthcare costs for 32 children who received care both at the hospial
and by HCS showed no increase in costs compared to estimated costs for only hospital care. Annual
productivity losses due to 25 parents' absenteeism from work, estimated from questionnaire-based
data, showed continued productivity losses during periods of HCS.
With trustful alliances between families, HCS and paediatric departments, cost-sustainable countybased HCS can be provided with high levels of family acceptability and positive effects on family
life and health in sick children of various ages, illnesses and stages of illness. However, unequal
accessibility and utilization may jeopardize care based on child and family needs.