MeSH: Parents
Parents’ views on what facilitated or complicated their grief after losing a child to cancer
—
by
OBJECTIVES: The loss of a child is a devastating event, and bereaved parents often suffer intense and long-lasting grief reactions and are at risk for psychological symptoms. More knowledge about how parents cope with grief may improve the support to bereaved parents. This study, therefore, aimed to explore parents’ views on what facilitated or complicated…
Experiences and needs of parents of palliative paediatric oncology patients: A meta-synthesis
—
by
INTRODUCTION: Despite palliative care being offered to paediatric cancer patients, it has limited utilisation and often excludes parental support. Therefore, this review aims to consolidate evidence regarding experiences and needs of parents of end-of-life palliative paediatric oncology patients. METHODS: Six electronic databases were searched as follows: CINAHL, The Cochrane Library, Embase, PubMed, Scopus and PsycINFO.…
Parent values and preferences underpinning treatment decision making in poor prognosis childhood cancer: A scoping review protocol
—
by
Introduction Parents of a child with cancer want to be involved in making treatment decisions for their child. Underpinning and informing these decisions are parents’ individual values and preferences. Parents of a child who has a poor prognosis cancer and who subsequently dies can experience decisional regret. To support parents, and potentially reduce decisional regret,…
Parental Perceptions of Hospital-Based Bereavement Support Following a Child’s Death from Cancer: Room for Improvement
—
by
CONTEXT: The death of a child from cancer is a devastating event, placing bereaved parents at risk for both physical and psychosocial morbidities. Despite growing awareness of these outcomes and increased hospital-based support, bereaved parents continue to express a desire for additional assistance. OBJECTIVES: We examined parental perceptions of bereavement support from the clinical teams…
Advance care planning for adolescents with cancer and their parents: study protocol of the BOOST pACP multi-centre randomised controlled trial and process evaluation
—
by
BACKGROUND: Research has highlighted the need for evidence-based interventions to improve paediatric advance care planning (pACP) in adolescents with cancer. Although adolescents express the desire and ability to share their values, beliefs and preferences for treatment, there is a lack of structured multicomponent interventions to improve parent-adolescent communication on different ACP themes including those not…
A quest for meaning: A qualitative exploration among children with advanced cancer and their parents
—
by
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…