| Literature DB >> 22567141 |
Annika Lindahl Norberg1, Ulrika Pöder, Gustaf Ljungman, Louise von Essen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Parents of children with cancer report post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) years after the child's successful treatment is completed. The aim of the present study was to analyze a number of objective and subjective childhood cancer-related factors as predictors of parental PTSS.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22567141 PMCID: PMC3342166 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0036218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Parent (N = 224) and child characteristics.
|
| % | n |
| Age of parent, years | ||
| <30 | 9 | (21) |
| 30–39 | 53 | (118) |
| ≥40 | 38 | (85) |
| Education | ||
| ≤Nine year elementary | 12 | (27) |
| Upper secondary | 54 | (120) |
| University | 34 | (77) |
| Parent of daughter/son | 47/53 | (106/118) |
| Age of child, year | ||
| 0–3 | 23 | (52) |
| 4–7 | 31 | (69) |
| 8–12 | 26 | (59) |
| 13–18 | 20 | (44) |
| Sibling/s, yes | 92 | (207) |
| Diagnosis | ||
| Leukaemia | 40 | (89) |
| Lymphoma | 18 | (41) |
| CNS tumour | 12 | (27) |
| Other solid tumour | 30 | (67) |
|
| ||
| Transplant | 16 | (36) |
T1: one week after the child's diagnosis.
T6: one year after end of treatment or death/1.5 year after transplant.
Descriptive statistics for the independent and dependent variables (n = 224).
| % (n) | mean (SD); range | |
|
| ||
| Parent gender: mother or stepmother | 50% (112) | n.a. |
| Parent ethnicity: born in the Nordic countries | 96% (214) | n.a. |
| Parent employment status at diagnosis: employed/student | 87% (194) | n.a. |
| Family income at diagnosis: more than 33 500 Euro annually | 82% (184) | n.a. |
| Parent traumatic experience prior to diagnosis | 31% (70) | n.a. |
|
| ||
| Parent satisfaction with care at T1 | n.a. | 89 (15); 25–100 |
| Parent perception of child psychological symptoms at T3 (MSAS PSYCH) | n.a. | .61 (.65); 0–3.33 |
| Parent perception of child physical symptoms at T3 (MSAS PHYS) | n.a. | .71 (.62); 0–3.15 |
| Parent perception of child's number of symptoms at T3 | n.a. | 9 (5); 0–26 |
|
| ||
| Child prognosis: ≥75% | 53% (118) | n.a. |
| Child treatment intensity: high | 51% (115) | n.a. |
| Child with non-fatal relapse | 8% (18) | n.a. |
| Death of the child | 17% (37) | n.a. |
| Antibiotic treatments of the child | n.a. | 4 (4); 0–22 |
| Hospitalizations of the child due to infections | n.a. | 2 (2); 0–8 |
| Blood transfusions of the child | n.a. | 11 (17); 0–122 |
| Child treated at ICU, number of days | n.a. | 1 (2); 0–11 |
|
| ||
| PCL-C score | n.a. | 28.6 (12.0); 17–75 |
PTSS: Post-traumatic stress symptoms; PCL-C: PTSD Checklist Civilian Version; n.a.: not applicable.
Missing data: five parents.
Missing data: 30 parents (mainly because their children were off treatment at T3).
For child variables, the values indicate percentage/number of parents.
Total during the child's cancer treatment.
Univariate associations between potential predictors and parental PTSS 12 months after completed treatment or death, or 18 months after transplant (Univariate linear regression; n = 224).
| R2 | |
|
| |
| Parent gender | .167 |
| Parent ethnicity | .044 |
| Parent employment status at diagnosis | .073 |
| Family income at diagnosis | .020 |
| Parent traumatic experience prior to diagnosis | .029 |
|
| |
| Parent satisfaction with care at T1 | .019 n.s. |
| Parent perception of MSAS PSYCH at T3 | .186 |
| Parent perception of MSAS PHYS at T3 | .082 |
| Parent perception of MSAS number of symptoms at T3 | .174 |
|
| |
| Child prognosis | .025 |
| Child treatment intensity | .031 |
| Child with non-fatal relapse | .0001 n.s. |
| Death of the child | .126 |
| Antibiotic treatments of the child | .001 n.s. |
| Hospitalizations of the child due to infections | .002 n.s. |
| Blood transfusions of the child | .007 n.s. |
| Child treated at ICU, number of days | .015-n.s. |
PTSS: Post-traumatic stress symptoms.
p<.05;
p<.01;
p<.001;
n.s. not significant.
Missing data: five parents.
Missing data: 30 parents.
Associations between potential predictors and parental PTSS 12 months after completed treatment or death, or 18 months after transplant (Hierarchical multivariate model; n = 224).
| Unstandardized B | |
| Parent gender | −2.162 n.s. |
| Parent ethnicity | 12.010 |
| Parent trauma prior to diagnosis | 0.836 n.s. |
| Parent employment status at diagnosis | −5.389 |
| Family income at diagnosis | 1.072 n.s. |
| Child prognosis | −0.623 n.s. |
| Child treatment intensity | 0.877 n.s. |
| Parent satisfaction with care at T1 | −0.087 n.s. |
| Parent perception of MSAS PSYCH at T3 | 3.688 |
| Parent perception of MSAS PHYS at T3 | −5.007 |
| Parent perception of MSAS number of symptoms at T3 | 0.765 |
| Child with non-fatal relapse | 4.622 n.s. |
| Death of the child | 9.690 |
PTSS: Post-traumatic stress symptoms.
p<.05;
p<.01;
p< .001;
n.s. not significant.
Missing data: five parents.
Missing data: 30 parents.