City
Epaper

Feeling safe most important for hospitalised kids

By IANS | Updated: July 7, 2019 17:10 IST

A feeling of safety and good night's sleep are the things that matter the most to sick kids in hospital.

Open in App

Published in the Journal of Advanced Nursing, the study fills a gap in our understanding of how children are feeling in hospital settings.

For the study, researchers developed the 'Needs of Children Questionnaire' (NCQ), the first of its kind to measure children's self-reported psychosocial, physical and emotional needs in paediatric wards.

"Development of the NCQ is part of an international movement to place children as central to care delivery, which honours the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child," said Mandie Foster, Professor at the Edith Cowan University in Australia.

The research team assessed 193 school-aged children in paediatric settings in Australia and New Zealand.

Children's most important needs were identified as: To know they are safe and will be looked after, to get enough sleep at night, hospital staff listening to them, to have places their parents can go to for food and drinks.

Over 1.7 million Australian children were admitted to hospitals in 2016-17, researchers said, which emphasizes on the importance of this study.

"As adults, we often make assumptions about children's needs and wants, but hospitals can be a scary and unfamiliar environment for many children and we shouldn't assume we know how they are feeling," Foster said.

"Being listened to and understood can give children an added sense of confidence about the situation they find themselves in," she added.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: australiaUnited Nations ConventionEdith Cowan University
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalEid Al-Fitr 2025: Australia to Celebrate Ramadan Eid on March 31 and First Day of Shawwal 1446 AH

CricketAustralia: Pak-Origin Player Dies While Playing Cricket In Extreme Heat During Ramadan Fast in Adelaide

Social ViralViral Video Shows Kids Using Dead Python as Skipping Rope in Australia, Internet Reacts

CricketMohammed Shami Ramadan Controversy: India Pacer's Coach Badruddin Siddique Defends Cricketer, Says Desh Ke Aage Kuch Nahin

CricketChampions Trophy 2025: Australia Enters Semi-Finals After Rain Abandoned Match vs Afghanistan

स्वास्थ्य Realted Stories

HealthHimachal takes steps to retain specialist doctors

HealthUganda declares end of Ebola outbreak

HealthScientists find cellular culprit behind age-related abdominal fat

HealthArmy Hospital performs its first minimally invasive glaucoma surgery

HealthScreening for both active and dormant TB infection key to improve detection: Study