“A sincere ‘how are you?’ is already a sign of acknowledgement that you're there too.” - Interview study on the support needs of adolescents and young adults (AYAs) living with a parent with cancer

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q1 NURSING
Marthe Tulpin , Anne-Lore Scherrens , Anne Van Driessche , Lesley L. Verhofstadt , Ulrika Kreicbergs , Liesbet Goubert , Kim Beernaert
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose

Parental cancer brings changes and challenges which affect the whole family. Evidence shows heightened psychosocial risk among the offspring. Research among adolescents and young adults (AYAs) facing parental cancer has mainly focused on these psychosocial problems. As a reaction, there has been an increase in research on the needs of this population, since this knowledge is crucial for developing appropriate support. Despite this increase, some AYAs are still underrepresented, namely those over eighteen years old and those who have a parent with incurable cancer. Moreover, the factors hampering or fostering access to and receipt of support addressing their needs are under-investigated. Increasing our understanding of these issues is crucial to developing more effective support interventions for these young people. Our aim was therefore to gain insight into the perceived support needs of AYAs who have a parent with cancer, including the mentioned underrepresented subgroups, and the perceived factors facilitating or hindering their use of support.

Methods

We conducted semi-structured interviews with 17 AYAs who have a parent with cancer of any type and stage, which were analyzed using conventional Qualitative Content Analysis (QCA).

Results

Six main categories emerged from the data, encompassing various subcategories: 1) Needs surrounding the time of disclosure, 2) Information needs, 3) Informal support needs, 4) Need for effective personal coping strategies, 5) Formal support needs, and 6) Contextual and medical factors affecting support needs. AYAs perceived family members, friends and teachers as important sources of informal support, but lacked contact with peers who also have a parent with cancer. They expressed a need for formal informational and emotional support from their parent's medical team, (onco)psychologists, and their general practitioner. AYAs faced barriers in accessing formal support. A proactive attitude from healthcare providers and information about available support would help them meet their needs. Furthermore, we shed new light on needs and issues in post-secondary education.

Conclusions

AYAs who are living with their parent with cancer experience informational, emotional, and practical needs in multiple contexts, such as the home, school, leisure and hospital environment. They identify their informal and formal network as important key figures in addressing these needs.

"一句真诚的'你好吗'已经是对你也在那里的认可"。- 关于与患癌父母共同生活的青少年的支持需求的访谈研究。
目的:父母罹患癌症会给整个家庭带来变化和挑战。有证据表明,后代的社会心理风险增加。对面临父母癌症的青少年的研究主要集中在这些社会心理问题上。作为一种反应,对这一人群需求的研究有所增加,因为这些知识对于制定适当的支持措施至关重要。尽管研究增加了,但一些青壮年患者的代表性仍然不足,即那些年龄超过 18 岁的患者和父母一方患有无法治愈的癌症的患者。此外,针对他们的需求,阻碍或促进他们获得和接受支持的因素也未得到充分研究。加深对这些问题的了解对于为这些年轻人制定更有效的支持干预措施至关重要。因此,我们的目标是深入了解父母一方患有癌症的亚裔青少年(包括上述代表性不足的亚群体)对支持需求的认知,以及促进或阻碍他们使用支持的认知因素:我们对 17 名父母患有任何类型和阶段癌症的亚裔美国人进行了半结构式访谈,并采用传统的定性内容分析法(QCA)对访谈结果进行了分析:结果:从数据中得出了六个主要类别,包括不同的子类别:1) 与披露相关的需求;2) 信息需求;3) 非正式支持需求;4) 有效个人应对策略需求;5) 正式支持需求;6) 影响支持需求的环境和医疗因素。青少年认为家人、朋友和老师是非正式支持的重要来源,但他们缺乏与父母同样患有癌症的同龄人的联系。他们表示需要从父母的医疗团队、(心理)医生和全科医生那里获得正式的信息和情感支持。青少 年在获得正式支持方面面临障碍。医疗服务提供者积极主动的态度以及关于现有支持的信息将有助于满足他们的需求。此外,我们还揭示了中学后教育的需求和问题:与罹患癌症的父母共同生活的亚裔青少年在家庭、学校、休闲和医院环境等多种环境中都有信息、情感和实际需求。他们认为自己的非正式和正式网络是满足这些需求的重要关键人物。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
3.60%
发文量
109
审稿时长
57 days
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Oncology Nursing is an international journal which publishes research of direct relevance to patient care, nurse education, management and policy development. EJON is proud to be the official journal of the European Oncology Nursing Society. The journal publishes the following types of papers: • Original research articles • Review articles
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