Child Health News
3-Jan-2005
A
survey of mothers in the January
issue of Pediatrics found that
physicians remain overwhelmingly
negative in communicating a
diagnosis of Down syndrome
in newborn infants.
Mothers
reported that the majority
of physicians were uninformed
about the positive potential
for children with Down syndrome,
and rarely provided an adequate,
up-to-date description of the
children, printed information,
or telephone numbers of other
parents. By nearly all ratings
-- including explaining Down
syndrome, the timing and setting
of the news, and the language
that was used -- physicians
fell far short of making the
birth a positive experience.
The
study was done by Brian Skotko,
a student at Harvard Medical
School (HMS) and Harvard's
John F. Kennedy School of Government,
and supported by the Tim White
Fund from Children's Hospital
Boston (where Skotko did his
pediatric rotation) and a part-time
research grant from HMS.
Skotko
mailed an 11-page survey to
nearly 3,000 members of five
Down syndrome parent organizations
in California, Colorado, Massachusetts,
North Carolina, and Rhode Island.
Of the 1,250 responses, nearly
1,000 were from mothers who
had not undergone prenatal
testing and received the Down
syndrome diagnosis after delivery.
Very few reported that the
birth of their child was a
positive experience.
Mothers
were frequently advised to
put up their child for adoption,
or chided for not having prenatal
testing, the survey found.
Some mothers received the news
too soon, such as while having
episiotomies stitched up. While
the worst reported instances
came from the 1980s and earlier,
and physicians improved over
time, mothers still described
insensitive comments as recently
as the late 1990s and early
2000s. A mother in 1997, for
example, heard a doctor refer
to her newborn as an "FLK"
("funny-looking kid");
another who gave birth in 2000
reported, "The doctor
flat out told my husband that
this could have been prevented
or discontinued at an earlier
stage of the pregnancy."
"Doctors
have gotten better over time,
but it's been a very slow change,
and they've really gone from
terrible to just bad,"
says Skotko, who has a 24-year-old
sister with Down syndrome and
co-authored the award-winning
book, Common Threads: Celebrating
Life with Down Syndrome (Band
of Angels Press). "Finding
out a diagnosis of Down syndrome
does not have to be a horrible
process. In fact, the mothers
in this study explain how physicians
can make it a positive experience.
We hope this paper will be
a catalyst for increased dialogue
among doctors."
Dr.
Allen Crocker, Skotko's faculty
advisor on the project and
director of the Down Syndrome
Program at Children's Hospital
Boston, says that the survey
findings echo his nearly 40
years of experience working
with families. "Physicians
have consistently been inadequate
and incomplete, and, on occasion,
offensive," he says. "This
study is the most searching
review of parents' experiences
of postnatal presentation of
a diagnosis of Down syndrome
ever published, and it has
been done with considerable
statistical care. It is clearly
a case of families teaching
physicians."
Skotko
notes that mothers with the
best birth experiences had
physicians who talked positively
of Down syndrome. Examples
include: "Your child is
going to bring great richness
and warmth to your family and
community"; "Your
child should be loved just
like any other child";
"Your child will teach
you and others life lessons";
"Your child will be a
beacon of what humanity is
supposed to stand for."
Based
on the mothers' comments, Skotko
offers a 10-point "prescription"
for communicating a diagnosis
of Down syndrome:
1.
The person to communicate the
Down syndrome diagnosis should
be a physician.
2.
Obstetricians, neonatologists
and pediatricians should coordinate
their messages.
3.
The diagnosis should be delivered
as soon as a physician suspects
the diagnosis, but only after
the mother is settled.
4.
Parents should receive the
news together, in a private
setting.
5.
The physician should first
congratulate the parents on
the birth of their child and
not forget to talk about the
positive aspects of Down syndrome.
They should not begin the conversation
by saying, "I'm sorry."
6.
Health care professionals should
keep their personal opinions
to themselves.
7.
Mothers should be provided
with up-to-date printed materials
– at a minimum, a bibliography
listing the most current resources
for new parents.
8.
Parents should be put in touch
with other families who have
children with Down syndrome.
9.
After the diagnosis or suspicion
is shared, parents should be
offered a private hospital
room.
10.
All physicians should educate
themselves about the educational
and social potentials of children
with Down syndrome.
Skotko
will soon publish a companion
paper in the American Journal
of Obstetrics and Gynecology
summarizing responses from
women who received the Down
syndrome diagnosis prenatally.
He also has conducted the same
pair of studies in Spain to
get a cross-cultural perspective.
Approximately
one of every 1,000 children
in the U.S. is born with Down
syndrome, meaning that approximately
5,000 parents receive the diagnosis
for their child each year.
Despite the widespread use
of prenatal testing, the majority
of families who have children
with Down syndrome do not learn
of their child's diagnosis
until after they are born.