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Parental Presence in Pediatric Ethics Meetings

Tundra lists 1 Parental Presence in Pediatric Ethics Meetings clinical trial. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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NCT07681518

Impact of Parental Presence at the Ethics Meeting in Neonatal Intensive Care

In neonatal intensive care, physicians are sometimes confronted with decisions to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining treatment for a critically ill newborn. In France, these decisions are made by the medical team through a formal collegial ("ethics") meeting. Parents are not legally required to take part in this meeting, and their participation remains very rare at the national level. Since 2018, the neonatal intensive care unit of Hopital NOVO (Pontoise site) has systematically offered parents the possibility of attending the collegial ethics meeting concerning their child when withholding or withdrawal of treatment is being considered. This study aims to evaluate the value of parental presence at the ethics meeting in helping parents understand the medical decisions made for their newborn. This is a retrospective, single-centre, non-interventional, qualitative study based on a questionnaire developed specifically for this purpose, in the absence of any validated tool. Parents of newborns for whom an ethics meeting was held between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2025 are invited to share their experience. Two questionnaire versions are used, one for parents who attended the meeting and one for parents who did not, allowing comparison between the two situations. The questionnaire explores parents' understanding of the decision, the emotional impact of the meeting, their sense of guilt and their acceptance of the decision. Main hypothesis: parental participation in the ethics meeting promotes a better understanding of the medical decision, reduces feelings of guilt, and improves parents' long-term emotional experience.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-07-02

Parental Presence in Pediatric Ethics Meetings