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George Rylance Birmingham Children's Hospital
NHS Trust, Birmingham B4 6NH
Correspondence to: Dr
Rylance
george.rylance{at}bhamchildrens.wmids.nhs.uk
Respect for patients' privacy and dignity and the
maintenance of confidentiality are long established principles of
medical practice. The General Medical Council has emphasised that
treating patients and families politely is important in establishing
and maintaining their trust.
1 2
Recent technological
advances have changed the focus of privacy and confidentiality issues
towards patients' identities in publications2 and
security of medical records.3 Considerations of patients'
dignity have concentrated on specific groups Using a structured questionnaire, I interviewed the parents (one
parent (232 cases) or both together (68 cases)) of 300 child inpatients
about privacy, dignity, and confidentiality experienced during their
child's stay in hospital. The parents of children aged 3 months to 16 years who had been in hospital for at least 36 hours were
non-selectively and opportunistically surveyed during visits to the
hospital from May 1996 to October 1997. Interviews took place in the
hospital during the child's stay or in the outpatient department
within 4 weeks of discharge (234 and 56 children respectively). The
children (of whom 90% were aged The table shows the responses to the questionnaire. More than four
fifths of parents reported overhearing confidential information on
three or more topics that they would not have expected to hear through
usual ward living or social contact (115 (96%) parents of children in
bays with
The findings of this study Ward rounds are identified as major problem areas. Their
structure varied according to the consultant leading the round: some preferred a "business" round away from patients, followed by a bedside review; others conducted full discussion round the
bedside. Although twice daily handover rounds were conducted away from patients, the other working arrangements and relatively large patient
numbers seemed to predispose to traditional bedside rounds.
Maintaining confidentiality for children in single rooms suggests
that ward design is important. Nevertheless, breaches of confidentiality and privacy, and lack of respect for patients' dignity, seem primarily to be problems of attitude, behaviour, and lack
of thought.
If these results reflect patterns prevalent in paediatric practice then
most children, parents, and carers receive care that falls far short of
the General Medical Council's guidelines on good practice.
Contributors: GR is the sole contributor.
Funding: None.
Competing interests: None declared.
(Accepted 30 October 1998)
for example, patients who
are dying.4 Long established ideals and principles
relating to privacy, dignity, and confidentiality, however, may not be
expressed in clinical practice. As children and their parents have the
same rights to these principles as adult patients, I conducted a survey
of parents' views on these issues in the context of paediatric
hospital practice.
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Subjects, methods, and results
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Subjects, methods, and results
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References
5 years) were from three medical
wards comprising bays with at least 4 beds (120 children), rooms with
two beds (120), and single rooms (60).
4 beds; 106 (88%) of those in two-bed rooms; and none of
those in single rooms). In 86% (189/221) of cases, parents said that
information was overheard from "ward rounds." The parents of the
282 children with medical conditions estimated that the number of
people taking part in ward rounds was 1 to 8; 14 parents of the 18 children with surgical conditions estimated that it was 15 or
more.
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Subjects, methods, and results
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that dignity, privacy, and
confidentiality were poorly respected on children's wards
are limited by several factors. Only three wards were used, although they accounted
for the turnover of more than 60% of the hospital inpatients and
involved more than 15 consultants. Memory may be variable and
exaggerated, and overheard information could have resulted from close
living and social contact on the wards. The aspects surveyed may not
have been what parents consider to be important issues of privacy,
dignity, and confidentiality. Also, children's views, which may differ
from parents', were not elicited as few children were old enough to
give a rational opinion. Some issues
for example, the desirability of
curtain pulling
may be less important to them.
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Acknowledgments
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Subjects, methods, and results
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© BMJ 1999