Unfortunately, your browser is too old to work on this website. Please upgrade your browser
Skip to main content

Children and young people’s versus parents’ responses in an English national inpatient survey

Funded by

The Health Foundation Logo

1 February 2018

Published journal: Archives of Disease in Childhood 

About 2 mins to read

Title

Children and young people’s versus parents’ responses in an English national inpatient survey 

Authors

D Hargreaves, S Sizmur, J Pitchforth

Published journal

Archives of Disease in Childhood 

Abstract

Objective Despite growing interest in children and young people’s (CYP) perspectives on healthcare, they continue to be excluded from many patient experience surveys. This study investigated the feasibility of, and additional information gained by, measuring CYP experiences of a recent hospital admission.

Design Cross-sectional analysis of national survey data.

Setting Inpatients aged 8–15 years in eligible National Health Service hospitals, July–September 2014.

Participants 6204 parents/carers completed the parent section of the survey. The CYP section of the survey was completed by CYP themselves (n=3592), parents (n=849) or jointly (n=1763).

Main outcome measures Pain relief, involvement, quality of staff communication, perceived safety, ward environment, overall experience.

Analyses Single-measures intraclass correlations (ICCs) were used to assess the concordance between CYP and parent responses about the same inpatient episode. Multilevel logistic regression models, adjusted for individual characteristics, were used to compare the odds of positive responses when the CYP section of the survey was completed by parents, by CYP themselves or jointly.

Results The CYP section of the survey was completed independently by 57.8% of CYP. Agreement between CYP and parent responses was reasonably good for pain relief (ICC=0.61 (95% CI 0.58 to 0.63)) and overall experience (ICC=0.70 (95% CI 0.68 to 0.72)), but much lower for questions comparing professionals’ communication with CYP and with their parents (ICC range=0.28 (95% CI 0.24 to 0.32) to 0.51 (95% CI 0.47 to 0.54)). In the regression models, CYP were significantly less likely than parents to report feeling safe (adjusted OR (AOR)=0.54 (95% CI 0.38 to 0.76)), involvement in decisions (AOR=0.66 (95% CI 0.46 to 0.94)) or adequate privacy (AOR=0.68 (95% CI 0.52 to 0.89)).

Conclusions Including CYP (8–15 years) in patient experience surveys is feasible and enhances what is known from parents’ responses.

You might also like...

Citation

Hargreaves DS, Sizmur S, Pitchforth J, et al.  Children and young people’s versus parents’ responses in an English national inpatient survey.  Archives of Disease in Childhood 2018;103:486-491. 

Kjell-bubble-diagramArtboard 101 copy

Get social

Follow us on Twitter
Kjell-bubble-diagramArtboard 101

Work with us

We look for talented and passionate individuals as everyone at the Health Foundation has an important role to play.

View current vacancies
Artboard 101 copy 2

The Q community

Q is an initiative connecting people with improvement expertise across the UK.

Find out more