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EMpowerment of PArents in THe Intensive Care: A multi-centre validation study in Japan

journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-05, 16:02 authored by Yujiro Matsuishi, Joseph Manning, Haruhiko Hoshino, Yuki Enomoto, Ikkei Munekawa, Ryo Ikebe, Masanori Tani, Naoko Tanaka, Bryan Mathis, Nobutake Shimojo, Yoshiaki Inoue, Jos Latour

Background

The importance of assessing family satisfaction in paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) is becoming increasingly recognised. The survey, EMpowerment of Parents in THe Intensive Care “EMPATHIC-30”, was designed to assess family satisfaction and has been translated and implemented in several countries but not yet in Japan.

Objectives

The objective of this study was to translate, culturally adapt, and validate the EMPATHIC-30 questionnaire in Japanese and to identify potential factors for family-centred care satisfaction.

Methods

We translated and adapted for patient-reported outcome measures via a 10-step process outlined by the Principles of Good Practice. Four paediatric PICUs in Japan participated in the validation study, and the parental enrolment criterion was a child with a PICU stay of >24 h. Reliability was measured by Cronbach's α, and congruent validity was tested with overall satisfaction-with-care scales by correlation analysis. Multivariate linear regression modelling was conducted to identify factors related to each domain of the Japanese EMPATHIC-30.

Results

A total of 163 parents (mean age: 31.9 ± 5.4 years; 81% were mothers) participated. The five domains of the Japanese EMPATHIC-30 showed high reliability (α = 0.87 to 0.97) and congruent validity, demonstrating high correlations with overall satisfaction in nurses (r = 0.75) and doctors (r = 0.76). Multivariate modelling found that elective admission, mechanical ventilation, and parents who had experience of a family member in an adult intensive care unit had higher satisfaction scores in all five domains (p < 0.05). Moreover, Buddhists assigned higher satisfaction scores in the Care and Treatment domain (p = 0.03).

Conclusions

The Japanese EMPATHIC-30 questionnaire has demonstrated adequate reliability and validity measures. We also identified that elective admission, mechanical ventilation, and having previous adult intensive care unit experience of a family member were factors in assigning higher scores for all satisfaction domains. PICU clinicians need to be cognisant of ethical, cultural, and religious factors relating to the critically ill child and their family.

Funding

This work was supported byTERUMO LIFE SCIENCE FOUNDATION in 2019, and the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research in Japan (22K17480)

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Healthcare

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Australian Critical Care

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

1036-7314

eissn

1878-1721

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-07-08

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Joseph Manning

Deposit date

2024-07-04

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