Literature DB >> 12776259

A substantive theory of Keeping the Spirit Alive: the Spirit Within children with cancer and their families.

Roberta Lynn Woodgate1, Lesley Faith Degner.   

Abstract

Despite increasing survivorship, childhood cancer is nonetheless still a very traumatic phenomenon. Children and families must confront many new stressors and challenges. Understanding what families experience is essential if pediatric oncology nurses hope to provide sensitive and comprehensive care. To help discover meaningful descriptions and interpretations of families' experiences with childhood cancer, process-oriented qualitative research needs to be undertaken. A longitudinal qualitative study guided by the philosophy of interpretive interactionism was conducted to arrive at an understanding of childhood cancer from the children's and families' perspectives. A theoretical purposive sample of 39 families residing in western Canada participated. Children (4(1/2)-to-18 years of age) with a variety of cancer diagnoses and their families (parents and siblings) participated. Data collection methods included formal and informal interviewing and participant observation. Data were analyzed by the constant comparative method of grounded theory and analysis of illness narratives. Although the original intent of this study was to focus on the children's cancer symptoms, the children and families could not easily separate their cancer symptom experiences from the whole cancer experience and all its associated "rough spots." They first needed to talk about the overall cancer experience, which led to the development of the study's first substantive theory--Keeping the Spirit Alive: The Spirit Within. This substantive theory provided an understanding of how children and families used the process of keeping the spirit alive in response to them having to experience the phenomenon of the cancer: "getting through all the rough spots." Description of this theory is the focus of this article. Ways that nurses can assist children and families in maintaining a sense of spirit are presented. Copyright 2003 by Association of Pediatric Oncology Nurses

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12776259     DOI: 10.1053/jpon.2003.75

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr Oncol Nurs        ISSN: 1043-4542            Impact factor:   1.636


  10 in total

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Review 5.  Family adjustment to childhood cancer: a systematic review.

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8.  Sense of coherence over time for parents with a child diagnosed with cancer.

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9.  Predictors of stress of parents of a child with cancer: a Jordanian perspective.

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10.  Family Adjustment When Facing Pediatric Cancer: The Role of Parental Psychological Flexibility, Dyadic Coping, and Network Support.

Authors:  Marieke Van Schoors; Annick Lena De Paepe; Jurgen Lemiere; Ann Morez; Koenraad Norga; Karolien Lambrecht; Liesbet Goubert; Lesley L Verhofstadt
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  10 in total

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