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- Title
The perceived effect of parental cancer on children still living at home: According to oncology health professionals.
- Authors
Alexander, Elise; O'Connor, Moira; Halkett, Georgia K. B.
- Abstract
Objective: How children are affected by their parent's diagnosis is limited in the literature, and children are typically not considered in current clinical practice. Despite suggestion that the patient's oncology team are well placed to support their children, this is yet to be sufficiently explored. This study aimed to explore how oncology healthcare professionals (HPs) perceive children are affected by a parent's diagnosis of cancer. Methods: This qualitative study was informed by principles of grounded theory and embedded within a social constructivist framework. 15 health professionals working in oncology were interviewed using a semi‐structured format. Data were analysed using methods of constant comparison. Results: From the perspective of HPs, when a parent is diagnosed with cancer, their dependent children are rendered invisible. Factors within the (a) clinical healthcare system and (b) the families' psychosocial context were identified, which contribute to the invisibility of children. Conclusion: HPs are well‐placed to facilitate an entry point into the healthcare system for patients' children; however, this is not occurring due to children's lack of visibility. Clinical and psychosocial barriers need to be addressed to ensure HPs are visibly aware of all children and thus able to appropriately support, intervene or refer on.
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology); CANCER patients; CANCER patient medical care; GROUNDED theory; INTERVIEWING; RESEARCH methodology; MEDICAL personnel; PARENT-child relationships; PARENTS; PROFESSIONS; QUALITATIVE research; HOME environment; DESCRIPTIVE statistics
- Publication
European Journal of Cancer Care, 2020, Vol 29, Issue 6, p1
- ISSN
0961-5423
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/ecc.13321