Home-Based Care for Children with Serious Illness: Ecological Framework and Research Implications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Ecological Framework of Human Development
- (1)
- We organized as many key elements of the system of home-based care into each level as possible, but we acknowledge that the elements within each level are not exhaustive;
- (2)
- We organized these elements into levels according to where each element originates, rather than by where the effect of each element is felt. To give an example, home care nursing, located at the community level, is provided by community agencies, although the effect of home care nursing is felt at the individual patient and family level;
- (3)
- While we organized these elements systematically and with careful consideration, we acknowledge that the levels of the actual system of home-based care may overlap in complex ways and the individual elements are somewhat fluid; that is, the individual elements could fit, conceptually, in other levels based on individual circumstances and under specific social, economic, and geographic factors;
- (4)
- The proposed framework serves as a starting point for building future research studies and may be modified as knowledge is generated from future studies.
3. Conceptual Framework of Home-Based Care for Children with Serious Illness and Their Families
3.1. Level 1—Patient
3.2. Level 2—Family Members
3.3. Level 3—Household
3.3.1. Housing
3.3.2. Family Health Literacy and Language Proficiency
3.3.3. Family Financial Challenges
3.4. Level 4—Community
3.4.1. Home Nursing Services
3.4.2. Primary Care
3.4.3. Pharmacy
3.4.4. Early Intervention
3.4.5. School-Based Care
3.5. Level 5—Region
3.5.1. Geography, Regulations, and Reimbursement
3.5.2. Pediatric Palliative Care (PPC)
3.5.3. Hospice Care
3.5.4. Long-Term Care (LTC)
3.6. Transcending Levels
3.6.1. Care Coordination
3.6.2. Care Disparities
4. Research Implications
4.1. Multilevel Observational Studies
4.1.1. Multilevel Quantitative Research
4.1.2. Multilevel Qualitative Research
4.2. Multilevel Intervention Studies
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Key Term | Definition |
---|---|
Ecological environment | Nested arrangement of structures that are “each contained within the next” |
Microsystem | “Complex of relations” between an individual and the environment that exist in that individual’s immediate setting, as defined by place, time, physical features, activity, participant, and role |
Mesosystem | “Interrelations” among the major settings in which an individual is situated at a particular point in that individual’s life; in other words, a mesosystem is “a system of microsystems” |
Exosystem | An extension of the mesosystem; encompasses other formal or informal social structures that do not directly contain the individual, but that “impinge upon or encompass the immediate settings in which that [individual] is found, and thereby influence, delimit, or even determine what goes on there”; this may include work, neighborhood, mass media, government agencies, etc. |
Macrosystem | “Overarching institutional patterns of the culture or subculture” (that is, economic, social, educational, legal, and political systems) that encompass the micro-, meso-, and exo-systems |
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Boyden, J.Y.; Hill, D.L.; LaRagione, G.; Wolfe, J.; Feudtner, C. Home-Based Care for Children with Serious Illness: Ecological Framework and Research Implications. Children 2022, 9, 1115. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9081115
Boyden JY, Hill DL, LaRagione G, Wolfe J, Feudtner C. Home-Based Care for Children with Serious Illness: Ecological Framework and Research Implications. Children. 2022; 9(8):1115. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9081115
Chicago/Turabian StyleBoyden, Jackelyn Y., Douglas L. Hill, Gwenn LaRagione, Joanne Wolfe, and Chris Feudtner. 2022. "Home-Based Care for Children with Serious Illness: Ecological Framework and Research Implications" Children 9, no. 8: 1115. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9081115
APA StyleBoyden, J. Y., Hill, D. L., LaRagione, G., Wolfe, J., & Feudtner, C. (2022). Home-Based Care for Children with Serious Illness: Ecological Framework and Research Implications. Children, 9(8), 1115. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9081115