Family risk communication preferences in pediatric surgery: A scoping review

J Pediatr Surg. 2023 May;58(5):891-901. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2023.01.027. Epub 2023 Jan 19.

Abstract

Background: Effective patient-surgeon communication is vital in pediatric surgical practice. However, family (including child) preferences for the format and content of risk communication information are largely unknown. In order to optimize the shared-decision making process, this scoping review explored the family-preferred methods for risk communication in pediatric surgery.

Methods: A search was conducted in 7 databases from inception until June 2020 to identify family risk communication preferences in pediatric surgical patients, with language restricted to English and French. Two independent reviewers completed the screening in Rayyan software following PRISMA protocol. Included publications were reviewed for data extraction, analyzed, and assessed for risk of bias using standardized instruments.

Results: A total of 6370 publications were retrieved, out of which 70 were included. Studies were predominantly from ENT (30.0%), general surgery (15.7%), and urology (11.4%). Family-preferred risk communication methods were classified as visual, verbal, technology-based, written, decision aids or other. Technological (32.4%) and written tools (29.7%) were most commonly chosen by families as their preferred risk communication methods. Written tools were frequently used in general surgery and urology, while technology-based tools were widely used in ENT. Most studies were cross-sectional and had a significant risk of bias.

Conclusion: Eliciting families' preferences for risk communication methods is critical for the implementation of shared decision-making. Different risk communication media appear to be preferred within specific surgical domains. To further improve shared-decision making in pediatric surgery, the development and usage of robust, validated risk communication tools are necessary.

Level of evidence: Level IV (Scoping Review).

Keywords: Communication methods; Patient-centered care; Pediatric surgical specialty; Share decision-making.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Communication
  • Decision Making
  • Humans
  • Surgeons*
  • Urology*