Publication | Closed Access
ADAPTATIONAL PROCESS OF PARENTS OF PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY PATIENTS
78
Citations
32
References
2000
Year
Family InvolvementEducationMental HealthPsychologyOncologyFamily InteractionFamily IntegrityParent LeadershipPsychosocial IssueChild DevelopmentPalliative CareNursingAdaptational ProcessGrounded TheoryPediatricsPediatric OncologyPediatric Oncology PatientsFamily TherapyMedicine
This study, based on grounded theory, explores the adaptational process of parents of pediatric oncology patients. Thirty-two Taiwanese parents (26 mothers and 6 fathers) were interviewed. Data were collected through individual in-depth and focus group interviews, observations, medical chart review, nurses' note, and researchers' reflexive journals. The findings suggest that parents adapt to their children's cancer by a dynamic process; i.e., they modify their coping tasks and related strategies as clinical events (e.g., diagnosis, side effects, relapses, or death) occur. This adaptational process consisted of five components: confronting treatment, maintaining family integrity, establishing support, maintaining emotional well-being, and searching for spiritual meaning. Related factors such as coping tasks are described.
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