RW: Working with Families and Children Flashcards

1
Q

What is a family?

A

A group of people who want to be involved in each other’s lives and are therefore bound together by emotional ties and a sense of belonging

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2
Q

Components of a family

A
  • small social system
  • has its own cultural values and rules
  • has a structure and basic functions
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3
Q

Family Nursing

A

Support and strengthen the resiliency of family members and the family unit

Depends on:

  • organization philosophy
  • type of care environment
  • particular dynamics or needs of each family
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4
Q

Working with Family as context vs client

A

Context

  • family seen as a larger social system which patient is a part
  • patient is primary focus

Client

  • focus on family unit and group dynamics
  • its patterns of interactions and functions
  • may provide care to subgroup within a family
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5
Q

Family Assessment

A

An exploration between the nurse and family to gain insight into the family’s perspective of the event, their strengths and need for support

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6
Q

Conducting a family assessment

A

a. create rapport
b. clarify roles (to family about what you can do and can not do)
c. Assure confidentiality while being honest about duties to report
d. seek out information about
- belief systems
- organizational patterns
- communication processes

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7
Q

Tools for family assessment

A

Visual image of family composition to identify resources

a. Genograms
b. Ecomaps

c. McMaster Model of Family Functioning (MMFF)

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8
Q

Graphic depiction

A
Squares = male
Circles = female
Triangles = non-binary gender
X = deceased
? = unsure about status
--- = weak relationship
--| |-- = weak broken relationshi
\+++ = hostile relationship
=   = close/strong
 = energy flow
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9
Q

MMFF Dimensions

A
  1. Problem solving
  2. Communication
  3. Role formation
  4. Affective responsiveness
  5. Affective involvement
  6. Behavioural control
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10
Q

Young families and serious parental illness

A

1 of every 20 North American children will experience death of a parent before age 15

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11
Q

Psychosocial distress

A

An unpleasant experience of an emotional, psychological, social or spiritual nature that interferes with the ability to cope with daily life

  • along a continuum
  • from feelings of vulnerability to true depression
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12
Q

Manifestation of psychosocial distress in children

A

a. physiological
- appetite, sleep disturbances, headaches

b. behavioural
- tantrums, aggression, substance use, poor performance in school

c. psychological
- anxiety

d. spiritual

e. social
- social withdrawal

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13
Q

Underrepresentation of psychosocial distress in children of people with serious illness

A
  • children don’t want to add to the burden

- psychosocial distress manifestations misinterpreted and detected

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14
Q

Misconceptions that prevent parents from talking to their children about a serious illness

A
  • children don’t have the capacity to understand
  • children need to be protected from difficult things
  • children can’t live with uncertainty
  • it should be initiated by children
  • it’s all they will think about
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15
Q

Reasons for parental hesitancy

A
  • not wanting to cause emotional damage
  • not knowing what, when and how to tell children
  • wanting to wait for “good news”
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16
Q

Impact of Truth-telling

A
  • knowing that something is changing (and what is happening) can help children develop resiliency
  • trust is a significant factor
  • can decrease levels of anxiety and distress
17
Q

Considerations for supporting parents in telling children

A

a. start with the parents
b. prepare for the discussion with kids
- planning out what to say
- preparing answers
- create appropriate space
c. talking to the children
- ask children what they understand

18
Q

Components of the conversation with children

A

a. explain the illness
b. describe the treatments
c. address the 4 C’s
(can it be cured? did I cause it? can i catch it? who will take care?)
d. describe signs of disease progression

19
Q

Children’s Understanding of Death

A

<2yr: no real concept
3-4yr: changed state but don’t understand finality
5-6yr: grasp finality of death but not personal mortality
>9yr: full understanding