is t he ‘child’s voice’ from diagnosis to end-of-life trustworthy?

51
Is the ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy? Pamela S. Hinds, PhD, RN, FAAN Director, Department of Nursing Research and Quality Outcomes Associate Director, Center for Translational Research Children’s National Health System Professor, Department of Pediatrics The George Washington University

Upload: madaline-dunlap

Post on 30-Dec-2015

23 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?. Pamela S. Hinds, PhD, RN, FAAN Director, Department of Nursing Research and Quality Outcomes Associate Director, Center for Translational Research Children’s National Health System Professor, Department of Pediatrics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Is the ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life

Trustworthy?

Pamela S. Hinds, PhD, RN, FAANDirector, Department of Nursing Research and

Quality OutcomesAssociate Director, Center for Translational

ResearchChildren’s National Health SystemProfessor, Department of PediatricsThe George Washington University

Page 2: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Children’s National Medical Center

Washington, D.C.

Page 3: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Disclosure

• I do not have any conflicts of interest to disclose.

• Funding sources for the data included in this presentation include the National Institute of Nursing Research , the National Cancer Institute, National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, Association of Critical Care Nurses, the Oncology Nursing Foundation, and Alex’s Lemonade Foundation

Page 4: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Child Voice Considered as Part of the Family Voice

Page 5: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Most Excellent Co-Investigators

Judy Hicks, LCSWWayne Furman, MDLinda Oakes, MSNDeo Kumar Srivastava, PhD

Justin Baker, MDSheri Spunt, MDJohanna Menard, BSN

Chris Feudtner, MD

Nancy West, BSNBrent Powell, MDivShana Jacobs, MDScott Mauer, MDMichele Pritchard, PhD, RN

Jami Gattuso, MSNChris Feudtner, MDTessie October, MD

Page 6: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Most Excellent Co-Investigators

• Bryce Reeve, PhD• David Freyer, DO, MPH

• Lillian Sung, M.D., PhD

• Catriona Mowbray, PhD, RN

• Kathy Kelly, PhD, RN

• Steven Joffee, M.D.

• Janice Wythcombe, PhD, RN

• Jichuan Wang, PhD

• Changrong Yuan, PhD, RN

Page 7: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Overview of Comments

•Provide a description of the child’s voice–an overview of the evolution of child -reported outcomes in clinical investigations•describe the parallel science of parent and clinician reports of child treatment

Page 8: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Overview of Comments

•Describe research methods to solicit the child’s voice–Address using the child’s voice

•Describe future steps to document and apply the child’s voice in clinical investigations and care

Page 9: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

The Child’s Voice -What is it? Why seek it? How do we seek it? When do we seek it? How do we use it?

Page 10: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

The Child’s Voice

•What is ‘the child’s voice’?–Literature review–Reflection on completed pediatric studies

–Dialogue with pediatric and family researchers

–Review of federal policies

Page 11: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

The Child’s Voice

• The direct reports of children using qualitative (e.g., words, colors, photos, depictions) , quantitative or both approaches to convey to others the quality of their illness experiences during a defined period of time.

Page 12: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

The Child’s Voice

What it is not:

–Body and facial expressions not included: require interpretation

–Age not included: variation –Parent voice–Clinician voice

Page 13: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

The Child’s Voice:

What is in the voice?

• Availability

• Intensity/ Degrees

• Meaning

Page 14: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

The Child’s Voice

•What evidence do we have that the child’s voice is real?

Page 15: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

The Child’s Voice: Is it Real?

• Symptoms– Pain - presence, location, intensity, change• Eland, 1975; 1978

• Awareness of Serious Illness– Not going to go home from the hospital– Not going to get better– Able to compare self to others

• Bluebond-Langer, 1978

Page 16: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Pediatric Self-Report Evolution of the Past Three Decades

Clinician Reports (CTCAE)

Use of

Adult Measures(HUI)

Proxy Reports (Play Performance

Scale)No Conceptual definitions for Pediatrics

Pediatric Definitions/Descriptions

Proxy Reports

Formatting changes to match Child Development (Rand)

● ● ●

IQ Assessments

Page 17: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Can an Ill Child Report?

•Evidence for ability to report symptoms–>130 reports in past 32 years•Instrumentation studies•Theory testing•Intervention

Page 18: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Can an Ill Child Report?

•>500 children 5 to 18+ years of age

• Time of Diagnosis• Following the first course or 6 weeks of treatment

• 3 months into treatment• 6 months into treatment • End of treatment• Survivorship

Page 19: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Can an Ill Child Report?

•Age of child reports: QoL–3 and 4 year olds – quantitative - pain

–5 years of age and older - quantitative – quality of life•Up to 20% of 5 year olds uncomfortable with selecting a score

•Up to 15% of 6 year olds uncomfortable

•Up to 10% of 7 year olds uncomfortable

Page 20: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Can an Ill Child Report?

•Aspect of TIME in the description of ‘the Child’s Voice’–Ability to report changes over time•Past 7 days/Past 30 days

–Influence of maturation and of the moment

Page 21: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Can an Ill Child Report?

•Quality of Life•Symptoms•Satisfaction with Care•Preference for Decision Making

Page 22: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Evolution of Pediatric Self-Report Measures for the Past Four Decades

Clinician Reports (CTCAE)

Use of

Adult Measures(Hill)

Proxy Reports (Play Performance)

No Conceptual definitions for Pediatrics

Patient-Reported Outcomes as Primary

Pediatric Definitions/Descriptions

Government Role

Proxy Reports

Formatting changes to match Child Development (Rand)

● ● ●

Page 23: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

National Initiatives and PROsFood and Drug Administration Guidelines-1

• “Guidance for Industry—Patient-reported Outcome Measures: Use in Medical Product Development to Support Labeling Claims” (December, 2009)

• Content Overview– Appropriate role of PRO in development of medical products

– Evaluation of PRO instruments (multiple criteria)– Clinical Trial Designs– Approaches to Data Analysis

• FDA accepts PRO endpoints in reviewing product applications

• Further highlights importance of PROs at national level

Page 24: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

National Initiatives and PROsFood and Drug Administration Gludeliens-2

• Criteria for evaluating a PRO as a clinical trial endpoint

• Conceptual framework underlying instrument• Selection of concepts relevant to disease, population and treatment being evaluated

• Key properties of instrumentation– Reliability

• Test-retest• Internal consistency

– Validity • Content• Construct

– Clinical sensitivity (ability to detect change)

Page 25: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

National Initiatives and PROsFood and Drug Administration Guidelines-3

Considerations for Children and Adolescents• In general, PRO review criteria similar to adults

• Additional age-related criteria– Age-related vocabulary– Language comprehension– Comprehension of health concept being measured– Duration of recall

• Proxy-reported outcome measures are discouraged– Observer reports should include only those events or behaviors that are directly observable

Page 26: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Evolution of Pediatric Self-Report Measures for the Past Four Decades

Clinician Reports (CTCAE)

Use of

Adult Measures(HUI)

Proxy Reports (Play Performance

Scale)No Conceptual definitions for Pediatrics

Patient-Reported Outcomes as Primary

Pediatric Definitions/Descriptions

Government Role

Proxy Reports

Formatting changes to match Child Development (Rand)

● ● ●

Child Voice

Incorporated into research and care

Page 27: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Evolution: Practice Guidelines

Page 28: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Research Priority Recommendations

Page 29: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Measuring the Child’s Voice

• Evolution from disease-specific instruments to document ill child’s voice

• Comparability across clinical contexts– Core instruments i.e., Pediatric PROMIS measures

– Pediatric PROMIS use with children diagnosed with cancer, sickle cell disease, asthma, kidney disease

Page 30: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Soliciting Pediatric Reported Outcomes

•Future Next Steps

Page 31: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Can Ill Children Report Treatment Toxicity?

• Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE), v. 4.03, 2010– Mandatory report by clinicians (DHHS/NIH/NCI)

• 147 clinicians identified AEs that children 7 to 20 years of age could report (subjective experiences)

• RO1 to create and validate the Pediatric CTCAE

Page 32: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Cognitive Interviewing

Age Group PediatricForm A (x items)

PediatricForm B(x items)

PediatricForm C(x items)

PediatricForm D(x items)

Totals

7-8 years 6 children6 proxies

6 children6 proxies

6 children6 proxies

6 children6 proxies

48 English speaking children and proxies (24 dyads)

9-12 years 6 children6 proxies

6 children6 proxies

6 children6 proxies

6 children6 proxies

48 English speaking children and proxies (24 dyads)

Age Group Adult Form A(x items)

AdultForm B(x items)

AdultForm C(x items)

  Totals

13-15 years 8 children8 proxies

8 children8 proxies

8 children8 proxies

  48 English speaking youth and proxies (24 dyads)

16-20 years 8 children8 proxies

8 children8 proxies

8 children8 proxies

  48 English speaking youth and proxies (24 dyads)

Page 33: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Cognitive Interviewing - Spanish

Age Group PediatricForm A (x items)

PediatricForm B(x items)

PediatricForm C(x items)

PediatricForm D(x items)

Totals

7-13 years

5 children5 proxies

5 children5 proxies

5 children5 proxies

5 children5 proxies

40 Spanish speaking children and proxies (20 dyads)

Page 34: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Soliciting the Child’s Voice

•‘Please tell me what you are hoping for now.’

Page 35: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

When Would a Child’s Voice be Silent?

• Able but not invited to speak• Able but not wanting to report

– Lack of confidence in self– Lack of confidence in those asking– Fear of outcomes– Protecting others

• Not Able to speak– Not understanding the method– Too ill

Page 36: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Soliciting the Child’s Voice

•Future Next Steps

Page 37: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Can Ill Children Report Treatment Toxicity?

• Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE), v. 4.03, 2010– Mandatory report by clinicians (DHHS/NIH/NCI)

• 147 clinicians identified AEs that children 7 to 20 years of age could report (subjective experiences)

• RO1 to create and validate the Pediatric CTCAE

Page 38: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

How Do We Validate the Ill Child’s Voice?

Page 39: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Can a Very Ill Child Report?

•Evidence for ability to report symptoms–>130 reports in past 15 years; <5% at end of life

Page 40: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Ill Child Reports at End of Life: 2007

Page 41: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Ill Child Reports at End of Life: 2012

Page 42: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Timing of Soliciting the Very Ill Child’s Voice

• Before the child loses his/her voice

• Soliciting child preferences– Method flexibility– Method blending

Page 43: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

• Ill child and parent agreement

– Measuring agreement over time• Challenging current approaches to ‘agreement’

– Estimation of change, concern – Effect of training to report– Other voices other than parent/guardian?

Can There be Only One Voice?

Page 44: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Child Voice/ Family Voice

ILL CHILD

THE PARENT

THE WELL SIBLING

Page 45: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Child and Parent Voices at End of Life

• Parent: – Doing as my child would prefer

• Child: – Thinking about my relationships with others

Page 46: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Single Unit of Analysis and Interpretation

• Child Reports

• Exclusionary• Informed• Collaborative• Delegation: Allowed to choose

• Parent Reports

• Exclusionary• Informed• Collaborative• Delegation: Allowed to choose

Page 47: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Combining Voices: Dyad, Triad and More

Family Level of Analysis

Family and Clinician Level of Analysis

Page 48: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Primary Points

• Ill children can self-report during illness and end-of-life care

• Parent s and clinicians add important voices to the ill child’s treatment and end-of-life experiences

• Single unit analyses and interpretations (ill child, parent, clinician) are informative but insufficient

Page 49: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

The Child’s Voice -What is it? Why seek it? How do we seek it? When do we seek it? How do we use it?

Page 50: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Of What Benefit is the Child’s Voice in Research and Care?• Accurate symptom and quality of life assessments

• Impact of therapy

• Impact of care

• Patient and parent trust of clinicians and satisfaction with care– Relationship with treatment decision- making

Page 51: Is t he ‘Child’s Voice’ from Diagnosis to End-of-Life Trustworthy?

Do We Trust the Child’s Voice?

• If we do not trust the child’s voice, we will not ask

• If we do not trust the child’s voice, we will not act on the voice

• If we ask, it is like a promise to the child to listen, to act in respect of the child’s voice