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Updated: Apr 23, 2026

Assessing the Coherence of Parents' Short Narratives Regarding their Child Using the Five-Minute Speech Sample Procedure
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Why families matter.

Hilde Lindemann1

  • 1Department of Philosophy, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan hlinde@msu.edu.

Pediatrics
|October 3, 2014
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Serious childhood illness strains family resources, potentially impacting other members. In severe cases, family well-being may necessitate prioritizing non-patient family members

Keywords:
best interestchildethicsfamilylawliterature

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Area of Science:

  • Pediatric healthcare
  • Family systems theory
  • Bioethics

Background:

  • Serious illness in a child places significant demands on family resources.
  • Sustained care for one member can strain the family unit and disrupt normal functions.
  • Severe illness can threaten overall family integrity.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the ethical considerations when a child's serious illness impacts family integrity.
  • To examine situations where the needs of other family members may supersede those of the pediatric patient.

Main Methods:

  • This is a conceptual article, not based on empirical data.
  • It involves ethical analysis and argumentation.
  • Draws on principles of family systems and pediatric care.

Main Results:

  • The article argues for a framework where family integrity can be a primary consideration.
  • It posits that in certain severe situations, the interests of parents, siblings, or grandparents may ethically override the pediatric patient's interests.
  • This challenges traditional patient-centered approaches in extreme circumstances.

Conclusions:

  • Protecting family integrity is crucial during a child's serious illness.
  • Ethical decision-making must sometimes balance the pediatric patient's needs against the survival of the family unit.
  • Further discussion is needed on prioritizing family well-being in pediatric critical care.