Paediatric burns: From the voice of the child

Introduction: Despite burns being common in children, research into the psychological experience and trauma remains limited. Improvements in the professional understanding of children's experiences will assist in improving holistic care. Purpose: This study uses phenomenology, a qualitative met...

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Main Authors: McGarry, Sarah, Elliott, Catherine, McDonald, A., Valentine, J., Wood, Fiona, Girdler, Sonya
Format: Journal Article
Published: Pergamon 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/34086
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author McGarry, Sarah
Elliott, Catherine
McDonald, A.
Valentine, J.
Wood, Fiona
Girdler, Sonya
author_facet McGarry, Sarah
Elliott, Catherine
McDonald, A.
Valentine, J.
Wood, Fiona
Girdler, Sonya
author_sort McGarry, Sarah
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Introduction: Despite burns being common in children, research into the psychological experience and trauma remains limited. Improvements in the professional understanding of children's experiences will assist in improving holistic care. Purpose: This study uses phenomenology, a qualitative methodology to explore the psychological experiences following a burn injury in children. Methods: In-depth interviews were conducted six months after burn with 12 (six girls and six boys) children who underwent surgery for a burn. The children were aged eight to 15 years. The interview examined the overall experience of children and included probing questions exploring participants’ perceptions, thoughts and feelings. Transcripts were analysed according to the seven-step Coliazzi method. Relationships between themes were explored to identify core concepts. Results: The findings demonstrated that trauma was central to the burn experience and comprised two phases: the burn trauma and the recovery trauma. Six themes emerged as a result of this experience: ongoing recurrent trauma; returning to normal activities; behavioural changes; scarring-the permanent reminder; family and adaptation. Conclusion: This research has clinical implications as its findings can be used to inform clinical care at all stages of the burn journey. These research conclusions could be used to develop comprehensive information and support management plans for children. This would complement and support the surgical and medical treatment plan, providing direction for comprehensive service delivery and improved psychosocial outcomes in children.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-340862019-07-08T04:31:07Z Paediatric burns: From the voice of the child McGarry, Sarah Elliott, Catherine McDonald, A. Valentine, J. Wood, Fiona Girdler, Sonya paediatrics psychosocial burns phenomenology Introduction: Despite burns being common in children, research into the psychological experience and trauma remains limited. Improvements in the professional understanding of children's experiences will assist in improving holistic care. Purpose: This study uses phenomenology, a qualitative methodology to explore the psychological experiences following a burn injury in children. Methods: In-depth interviews were conducted six months after burn with 12 (six girls and six boys) children who underwent surgery for a burn. The children were aged eight to 15 years. The interview examined the overall experience of children and included probing questions exploring participants’ perceptions, thoughts and feelings. Transcripts were analysed according to the seven-step Coliazzi method. Relationships between themes were explored to identify core concepts. Results: The findings demonstrated that trauma was central to the burn experience and comprised two phases: the burn trauma and the recovery trauma. Six themes emerged as a result of this experience: ongoing recurrent trauma; returning to normal activities; behavioural changes; scarring-the permanent reminder; family and adaptation. Conclusion: This research has clinical implications as its findings can be used to inform clinical care at all stages of the burn journey. These research conclusions could be used to develop comprehensive information and support management plans for children. This would complement and support the surgical and medical treatment plan, providing direction for comprehensive service delivery and improved psychosocial outcomes in children. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/34086 10.1016/j.burns.2013.08.031 Pergamon restricted
spellingShingle paediatrics
psychosocial
burns
phenomenology
McGarry, Sarah
Elliott, Catherine
McDonald, A.
Valentine, J.
Wood, Fiona
Girdler, Sonya
Paediatric burns: From the voice of the child
title Paediatric burns: From the voice of the child
title_full Paediatric burns: From the voice of the child
title_fullStr Paediatric burns: From the voice of the child
title_full_unstemmed Paediatric burns: From the voice of the child
title_short Paediatric burns: From the voice of the child
title_sort paediatric burns: from the voice of the child
topic paediatrics
psychosocial
burns
phenomenology
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/34086