Parental reactions in childhood cancer : distress, risk and resilience

Parents of children with cancer encounter an exceptionally difficult life experience. Acute and long-lasting distress adds to the initial traumatic experience of being told that a family member suffers from a potentially fatal illness. This thesis investigates the determinants of short and long-term...

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Main Author: Guðmundsdóttir, Eygló
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Inst för kvinnors och barns hälsa / Dept of Women's and Children's Health 2011
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10616/40597
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spelling ftkarolinskainst:oai:openarchive.ki.se:10616/40597 2023-11-12T04:19:29+01:00 Parental reactions in childhood cancer : distress, risk and resilience Guðmundsdóttir, Eygló 2011-05-04 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10616/40597 eng eng Inst för kvinnors och barns hälsa / Dept of Women's and Children's Health I. Gudmundsdóttir, E., Schirren, M., Boman, K. K. (2011). Psychological resilience and long-term distress in Swedish and Icelandic parents' adjustment to childhood cancer. Acta Oncol. 50(3), 373-380. ::doi::10.3109/0284186X.2010.489572 ::pmid::20586659 ::isi::000288323800008 II. Gudmundsdóttir, E., Boman, K.K. Psychological outcomes in Swedish and Icelandic parents following a child's cancer - in the light of site-related differences and organisation. [Manuscript] 978-91-7457-355-8 http://hdl.handle.net/10616/40597 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/other lic 2011 ftkarolinskainst 2023-10-25T22:37:07Z Parents of children with cancer encounter an exceptionally difficult life experience. Acute and long-lasting distress adds to the initial traumatic experience of being told that a family member suffers from a potentially fatal illness. This thesis investigates the determinants of short and long-term psychological effects in parents in two Nordic sites with different routines for care and follow-up. A general aim was increased knowledge and understanding of parental reactions and psychosocial follow-up needs of families. Study I examined the significance of individual strengths for parental resilience against distress by studying the relationships between Sense of Coherence (SOC) and illness-specific and generic distress symptoms. We also studied whether parental gender, level of education, and use of professional psychological support influenced that relationship. Data were collected from 190 parents of 126 childhood cancer (CC) survivors, and 208 parents from the general population. SOC was assessed using the SOC-13 questionnaire. Distress outcomes were measured using the multi-dimensional Parental Psychosocial Distress in Cancer (PPD-C) questionnaire, which covers uncertainty, loss of control, self-esteem, anxiety, disease-related fear, loneliness, sleep disturbances, depression, and psychological and physical distress. Non-pathological psychiatric symptoms were screened for using the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12). Study II, included 328 parents of 211 CC patients at one of two sites, either in Sweden or Iceland, and 208 control parents. We studied occurrence of cancer-related parental reactions, and compared distress symptoms in the two national samples. A goal was to identify of nation-, site- and organisation-related determinants of parental experiences. Outcomes were evaluated against non-clinical norm data. Study I provided support for the hypothesis about a protective influence of SOC, and that SOC is associated with resilience also in this population. Influence of SOC was strongest regarding ... Other/Unknown Material Iceland Karolinska Institutet: Publications
institution Open Polar
collection Karolinska Institutet: Publications
op_collection_id ftkarolinskainst
language English
description Parents of children with cancer encounter an exceptionally difficult life experience. Acute and long-lasting distress adds to the initial traumatic experience of being told that a family member suffers from a potentially fatal illness. This thesis investigates the determinants of short and long-term psychological effects in parents in two Nordic sites with different routines for care and follow-up. A general aim was increased knowledge and understanding of parental reactions and psychosocial follow-up needs of families. Study I examined the significance of individual strengths for parental resilience against distress by studying the relationships between Sense of Coherence (SOC) and illness-specific and generic distress symptoms. We also studied whether parental gender, level of education, and use of professional psychological support influenced that relationship. Data were collected from 190 parents of 126 childhood cancer (CC) survivors, and 208 parents from the general population. SOC was assessed using the SOC-13 questionnaire. Distress outcomes were measured using the multi-dimensional Parental Psychosocial Distress in Cancer (PPD-C) questionnaire, which covers uncertainty, loss of control, self-esteem, anxiety, disease-related fear, loneliness, sleep disturbances, depression, and psychological and physical distress. Non-pathological psychiatric symptoms were screened for using the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12). Study II, included 328 parents of 211 CC patients at one of two sites, either in Sweden or Iceland, and 208 control parents. We studied occurrence of cancer-related parental reactions, and compared distress symptoms in the two national samples. A goal was to identify of nation-, site- and organisation-related determinants of parental experiences. Outcomes were evaluated against non-clinical norm data. Study I provided support for the hypothesis about a protective influence of SOC, and that SOC is associated with resilience also in this population. Influence of SOC was strongest regarding ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author Guðmundsdóttir, Eygló
spellingShingle Guðmundsdóttir, Eygló
Parental reactions in childhood cancer : distress, risk and resilience
author_facet Guðmundsdóttir, Eygló
author_sort Guðmundsdóttir, Eygló
title Parental reactions in childhood cancer : distress, risk and resilience
title_short Parental reactions in childhood cancer : distress, risk and resilience
title_full Parental reactions in childhood cancer : distress, risk and resilience
title_fullStr Parental reactions in childhood cancer : distress, risk and resilience
title_full_unstemmed Parental reactions in childhood cancer : distress, risk and resilience
title_sort parental reactions in childhood cancer : distress, risk and resilience
publisher Inst för kvinnors och barns hälsa / Dept of Women's and Children's Health
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10616/40597
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation I. Gudmundsdóttir, E., Schirren, M., Boman, K. K. (2011). Psychological resilience and long-term distress in Swedish and Icelandic parents' adjustment to childhood cancer. Acta Oncol. 50(3), 373-380. ::doi::10.3109/0284186X.2010.489572 ::pmid::20586659 ::isi::000288323800008
II. Gudmundsdóttir, E., Boman, K.K. Psychological outcomes in Swedish and Icelandic parents following a child's cancer - in the light of site-related differences and organisation. [Manuscript]
978-91-7457-355-8
http://hdl.handle.net/10616/40597
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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