Parents’ Psychological and Decision-Making Outcomes following Prenatal Diagnosis with Complex Congenital Heart Defect: An Exploratory Study

Background. Parents with a fetus diagnosed with a complex congenital heart defect (CHD) are at high risk of negative psychological outcomes. Purpose. To explore whether parents’ psychological and decision-making outcomes differed based on their treatment decision and fetus/neonate survival status. M...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alistair Thorpe, Rebecca K. Delaney, Nelangi M. Pinto, Elissa M. Ozanne, Mandy L. Pershing, Lisa M. Hansen, Linda M. Lambert, Angela Fagerlin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2023-10-01
Series:MDM Policy & Practice
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23814683231204551
_version_ 1797644207955902464
author Alistair Thorpe
Rebecca K. Delaney
Nelangi M. Pinto
Elissa M. Ozanne
Mandy L. Pershing
Lisa M. Hansen
Linda M. Lambert
Angela Fagerlin
author_facet Alistair Thorpe
Rebecca K. Delaney
Nelangi M. Pinto
Elissa M. Ozanne
Mandy L. Pershing
Lisa M. Hansen
Linda M. Lambert
Angela Fagerlin
author_sort Alistair Thorpe
collection DOAJ
description Background. Parents with a fetus diagnosed with a complex congenital heart defect (CHD) are at high risk of negative psychological outcomes. Purpose. To explore whether parents’ psychological and decision-making outcomes differed based on their treatment decision and fetus/neonate survival status. Methods. We prospectively enrolled parents with a fetus diagnosed with a complex, life-threatening CHD from September 2018 to December 2020. We tested whether parents’ psychological and decision-making outcomes 3 months posttreatment differed by treatment choice and survival status. Results. Our sample included 23 parents (average Age [years] : 27 ± 4, range = 21–37). Most were women ( n  = 18), non-Hispanic White ( n  = 20), and married ( n  = 21). Most parents chose surgery ( n  = 16), with 11 children surviving to the time of the survey; remaining parents ( n  = 7) chose comfort-directed care. Parents who chose comfort-directed care reported higher distress ( x ¯  = 1.51, s  = 0.75 v. x ¯  = 0.74, s  = 0.55; Mdifference = 0.77, 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.05–1.48) and perinatal grief ( x ¯  = 91.86, s  = 22.96 v. x ¯  = 63.38, s  = 20.15; Mdifference = 27.18, 95% CI, 6.20–48.16) than parents who chose surgery, regardless of survival status. Parents who chose comfort-directed care reported higher depression ( x ¯  = 1.64, s  = 0.95 v. x ¯  = 0.65, s  = 0.49; Mdifference = 0.99, 95% CI, 0.10–1.88) than parents whose child survived following surgery. Parents choosing comfort-directed care reported higher regret ( x ¯  = 26.43, s  = 8.02 v. x ¯  = 5.00, s  = 7.07; Mdifference = 21.43, 95% CI, 11.59–31.27) and decisional conflict ( x ¯  = 20.98, s  = 10.00 v. x ¯  = 3.44, s  = 4.74; Mdifference = 17.54, 95% CI; 7.75–27.34) than parents whose child had not survived following surgery. Parents whose child survived following surgery reported lower grief (Mdifference = −19.71; 95% CI, −39.41 to −0.01) than parents whose child had not. Conclusions. The results highlight the potential for interventions and care tailored to parents’ treatment decisions and outcomes to support parental coping and well-being. Highlights Question: Do the psychological and decision-making outcomes of parents differ based on their treatment decision and survival outcome following prenatal diagnosis with complex CHD? Findings: In this exploratory study, parents who decided to pursue comfort-directed care after a prenatal diagnosis reported higher levels of psychological distress and grief as well as higher decisional conflict and regret than parents who decided to pursue surgery. Meaning: The findings from this exploratory study highlight potential differences in parents’ psychological and decision-making outcomes following a diagnosis of complex CHD for their fetus, which appear to relate to the treatment approach and the treatment outcome and may require tailoring of psychological and decision support.
first_indexed 2024-03-11T14:27:09Z
format Article
id doaj.art-60c5de0354904f7397c28785a5d5fa65
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2381-4683
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-11T14:27:09Z
publishDate 2023-10-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series MDM Policy & Practice
spelling doaj.art-60c5de0354904f7397c28785a5d5fa652023-10-31T14:33:31ZengSAGE PublishingMDM Policy & Practice2381-46832023-10-01810.1177/23814683231204551Parents’ Psychological and Decision-Making Outcomes following Prenatal Diagnosis with Complex Congenital Heart Defect: An Exploratory StudyAlistair ThorpeRebecca K. DelaneyNelangi M. PintoElissa M. OzanneMandy L. PershingLisa M. HansenLinda M. LambertAngela FagerlinBackground. Parents with a fetus diagnosed with a complex congenital heart defect (CHD) are at high risk of negative psychological outcomes. Purpose. To explore whether parents’ psychological and decision-making outcomes differed based on their treatment decision and fetus/neonate survival status. Methods. We prospectively enrolled parents with a fetus diagnosed with a complex, life-threatening CHD from September 2018 to December 2020. We tested whether parents’ psychological and decision-making outcomes 3 months posttreatment differed by treatment choice and survival status. Results. Our sample included 23 parents (average Age [years] : 27 ± 4, range = 21–37). Most were women ( n  = 18), non-Hispanic White ( n  = 20), and married ( n  = 21). Most parents chose surgery ( n  = 16), with 11 children surviving to the time of the survey; remaining parents ( n  = 7) chose comfort-directed care. Parents who chose comfort-directed care reported higher distress ( x ¯  = 1.51, s  = 0.75 v. x ¯  = 0.74, s  = 0.55; Mdifference = 0.77, 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.05–1.48) and perinatal grief ( x ¯  = 91.86, s  = 22.96 v. x ¯  = 63.38, s  = 20.15; Mdifference = 27.18, 95% CI, 6.20–48.16) than parents who chose surgery, regardless of survival status. Parents who chose comfort-directed care reported higher depression ( x ¯  = 1.64, s  = 0.95 v. x ¯  = 0.65, s  = 0.49; Mdifference = 0.99, 95% CI, 0.10–1.88) than parents whose child survived following surgery. Parents choosing comfort-directed care reported higher regret ( x ¯  = 26.43, s  = 8.02 v. x ¯  = 5.00, s  = 7.07; Mdifference = 21.43, 95% CI, 11.59–31.27) and decisional conflict ( x ¯  = 20.98, s  = 10.00 v. x ¯  = 3.44, s  = 4.74; Mdifference = 17.54, 95% CI; 7.75–27.34) than parents whose child had not survived following surgery. Parents whose child survived following surgery reported lower grief (Mdifference = −19.71; 95% CI, −39.41 to −0.01) than parents whose child had not. Conclusions. The results highlight the potential for interventions and care tailored to parents’ treatment decisions and outcomes to support parental coping and well-being. Highlights Question: Do the psychological and decision-making outcomes of parents differ based on their treatment decision and survival outcome following prenatal diagnosis with complex CHD? Findings: In this exploratory study, parents who decided to pursue comfort-directed care after a prenatal diagnosis reported higher levels of psychological distress and grief as well as higher decisional conflict and regret than parents who decided to pursue surgery. Meaning: The findings from this exploratory study highlight potential differences in parents’ psychological and decision-making outcomes following a diagnosis of complex CHD for their fetus, which appear to relate to the treatment approach and the treatment outcome and may require tailoring of psychological and decision support.https://doi.org/10.1177/23814683231204551
spellingShingle Alistair Thorpe
Rebecca K. Delaney
Nelangi M. Pinto
Elissa M. Ozanne
Mandy L. Pershing
Lisa M. Hansen
Linda M. Lambert
Angela Fagerlin
Parents’ Psychological and Decision-Making Outcomes following Prenatal Diagnosis with Complex Congenital Heart Defect: An Exploratory Study
MDM Policy & Practice
title Parents’ Psychological and Decision-Making Outcomes following Prenatal Diagnosis with Complex Congenital Heart Defect: An Exploratory Study
title_full Parents’ Psychological and Decision-Making Outcomes following Prenatal Diagnosis with Complex Congenital Heart Defect: An Exploratory Study
title_fullStr Parents’ Psychological and Decision-Making Outcomes following Prenatal Diagnosis with Complex Congenital Heart Defect: An Exploratory Study
title_full_unstemmed Parents’ Psychological and Decision-Making Outcomes following Prenatal Diagnosis with Complex Congenital Heart Defect: An Exploratory Study
title_short Parents’ Psychological and Decision-Making Outcomes following Prenatal Diagnosis with Complex Congenital Heart Defect: An Exploratory Study
title_sort parents psychological and decision making outcomes following prenatal diagnosis with complex congenital heart defect an exploratory study
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23814683231204551
work_keys_str_mv AT alistairthorpe parentspsychologicalanddecisionmakingoutcomesfollowingprenataldiagnosiswithcomplexcongenitalheartdefectanexploratorystudy
AT rebeccakdelaney parentspsychologicalanddecisionmakingoutcomesfollowingprenataldiagnosiswithcomplexcongenitalheartdefectanexploratorystudy
AT nelangimpinto parentspsychologicalanddecisionmakingoutcomesfollowingprenataldiagnosiswithcomplexcongenitalheartdefectanexploratorystudy
AT elissamozanne parentspsychologicalanddecisionmakingoutcomesfollowingprenataldiagnosiswithcomplexcongenitalheartdefectanexploratorystudy
AT mandylpershing parentspsychologicalanddecisionmakingoutcomesfollowingprenataldiagnosiswithcomplexcongenitalheartdefectanexploratorystudy
AT lisamhansen parentspsychologicalanddecisionmakingoutcomesfollowingprenataldiagnosiswithcomplexcongenitalheartdefectanexploratorystudy
AT lindamlambert parentspsychologicalanddecisionmakingoutcomesfollowingprenataldiagnosiswithcomplexcongenitalheartdefectanexploratorystudy
AT angelafagerlin parentspsychologicalanddecisionmakingoutcomesfollowingprenataldiagnosiswithcomplexcongenitalheartdefectanexploratorystudy