MeSH: Fathers
A quest for meaning: A qualitative exploration among children with advanced cancer and their parents
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OBJECTIVE: Meaning-making may assist individuals in adaptation to stressful life events, particularly bereavement. However, few studies have examined meaning-making among pediatric populations with advanced illness to understand how this process unfolds before the child’s death. This study explores meaning-making pre-bereavement among children with advanced cancer and their parents. METHODS: As part of a larger study…
Experiences of fathers of children with a life-limiting condition: a systematic review and qualitative synthesis
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BACKGROUND: Children with a life-limiting condition often require extensive and complex care, much of which is provided by their parents at home. There is a growing body of research that aims to understand the experiences of these parents, but the majority of this research is from mothers’ perspectives, meaning that fathers’ experiences are not well…
Having Therapeutic Conversations With Fathers Grieving the Death of a Child
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A child’s death is a traumatic life experience for parents. Health-care professionals (HCPs) have sought guidance on how to intervene with grieving parents, particularly with fathers. Having therapeutic conversations is an effective way for HCPs to support grieving fathers. In our previous study, fathers identified core beliefs that influenced their experience of grief and coping.…
A meta-ethnographic study of fathers’ experiences of caring for a child with a life-limiting illness
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BACKGROUND: There is a growing body of qualitative studies examining parents’ experiences of caring for a child with a life-limiting condition, coinciding with recent evidence that indicates an increasing incidence of paediatric life-limiting conditions. However, research focusing on fathers’ needs remains sparse and is often diluted among a predominant ‘mother’s voice’, raising questions about whether…