Giving hope to families in palliative care and implications for practice
Intended for healthcare professionals
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Giving hope to families in palliative care and implications for practice

Helen Smith Paediatric research sister, Clinical Research Network: Yorkshire and Humber, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

While parents of children with life-limiting may not be in denial, Helen Smith suggests they will need time to come to terms with the inevitable, and nurses are crucial to conveying information sensitively and involving them in decisions

Caring for a dying child and the family is one of the greatest nursing challenges. The way in which care is delivered will shape the experience they are about to face. Hope plays a crucial role in helping people cope, and healthcare professionals can foster appropriate hopes ethically, while maintaining open and honest communication. If palliative care is discussed with clients and families from the time of diagnosis, they can face realistic decisions better and not feel that they are ‘giving up’. They need to know that everything possible is being done to improve the quality of the time left to them.

Nursing Children and Young People. 26, 5, 21-25. doi: 10.7748/ncyp.26.5.21.e412

Correspondence

helenmsmith2001@yahoo.com

Peer review

This article has been subject to open peer review

Conflict of interest

None declared

Received: 05 May 2013

Accepted: 05 December 2013

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