Parental attitudes toward infant pulmonary function testing

Pediatric Pulmonology
M J HaydenP N LeSouëf

Abstract

Infant pulmonary function tests (PFTs) have proven increasingly popular and useful for clinical and research purposes. Informed consent requires accurate information on side effects. Our aim was to quantify minor side effects from a parental point of view by means of a questionnaire. The parents of 97 infants attending for PFTs were asked to complete a simple questionnaire. Eighty-one parents (84%) returned the questionnaire. Forty-one percent felt that their infants were not troubled by the process of administering the sedative chloral hydrate, whereas 55% suffered mild to moderate distress. In contrast, 94% of infants were not distressed by the actual PFTs. Similarly, 46% of parents were not distressed by the administration of sedative to their infant, with 49% expressing distress to a mild or moderate degree. Although 73% of parents were not distressed by watching their infants undergo the PFTs, 27% were to a mild to moderate degree. Seventy-three percent of infants were untroubled on waking. Seventy percent of infants had a good nights sleep after the PFTs. The vast majority of parents (94%) were happy to recommend that others allow their infants to undergo similar testing. We noted that most problems caused by infant PFTs ...Continue Reading

References

Mar 1, 1978·Pediatrics·N J Smith
Jan 1, 1988·Pediatric Pulmonology·J Mallol, P D Sly
Jun 16, 1966·The New England Journal of Medicine·J H BatesJ A Pierce
Jun 1, 1984·Pediatric Research·M HershensonC E Hunt
Jan 1, 1995·The European Respiratory Journal·C Gaultier
Jul 1, 1996·American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine·P D SlyZ Hantos
May 1, 1997·American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine·M J HaydenP N LeSouëf

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Citations

Jun 14, 2003·Current Opinion in Pediatrics·Daniel J WeinerHoward B Panitch
Jul 6, 2006·Archives of Disease in Childhood·A GammelgaardH Bisgaard

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