Literature DB >> 15880477

Psychological adjustment of parents of pediatric cancer patients revisited: five years later.

Barbara J Wijnberg-Williams1, Willem A Kamps, Ed C Klip, Josette E H M Hoekstra-Weebers.   

Abstract

We investigated the psychological functioning of parents of children suffering from pediatric cancer using a prospective design over a five-year time period. Parents of children diagnosed with cancer participated at diagnosis (T1), six months (T2), twelve months (T3), and five years later (T4, n = 115). Repeated measures ANOVAs were calculated for the three measures of psychological distress (GHQ, SCL-90 and STAI-S) to examine changes over time and gender differences. Independent T-tests were computed to examine differences between the mean scores of the parents at T4 and the norm groups. The effects of health status and earlier levels of distress on T4 functioning were examined using ANOVA and partial correlational analysis. Results showed that levels of reported distress, psychoneurotic symptoms and state anxiety significantly decreased across time to normal levels at T4 except on the GHQ. A significantly higher percentage of parents (27%) than in the norm group (15%) showed clinically elevated scores on the GHQ. Mothers had higher scores than fathers only on state anxiety. Parents of relapsed children reported higher anxiety levels than parents of surviving and deceased children. Psychological functioning at T1 was significantly related to functioning at T4. These results support the conclusion that although parental distress decreases with time, a significant number of parents still suffer from clinical distress after five years. Parents of relapsed children are at risk for long-term psychological problems as are those with higher levels of psychosomatic complaints at diagnosis. Copyright (c) 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 15880477     DOI: 10.1002/pon.927

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychooncology        ISSN: 1057-9249            Impact factor:   3.894


  30 in total

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8.  Anxiety and stress in mothers and fathers in the 24 h after their child's surgery.

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9.  Long-term trajectories of depression symptoms in mothers of children with cancer.

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10.  Parents of Children With Food Allergy: Gender Differences in Perceived Impact and Perceived Food Allergy Severity.

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