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ALL maintenance phase still stressful, studies show

Leukemia patient

Credit: Bill Branson

The stress and lifestyle changes mothers experience after a child’s leukemia diagnosis do not disappear once the disease is in the maintenance phase, new research suggests.

One study showed that mothers of patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) continued to exhibit signs of stress, anxiety, and depression when their child’s disease was in the maintenance phase.

And another study showed that a family’s daily schedule and sleeping arrangements did not return to the way they were before the child’s diagnosis.

“Even though these mothers were in the maintenance phase of their child’s illness, and the prognosis was good, we heard them say over and over that things could never go back to what they were before,” said study author Madalynn Neu, PhD, RN, of the Colorado University College of Nursing.

Stress, depression, and anxiety

In the Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing, Dr Neu and her colleagues reported their analysis of stress, anxiety, and depression among the mothers of patients with ALL. The team evaluated 26 mothers of ALL patients and 26 mothers of healthy children, who were matched according to the child’s age and gender.

To assess anxiety, the researchers collected salivary cortisol from the mothers 4 times a day for 3 consecutive days. The mothers also completed questionnaires—the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the Perceived Stress Scale.

More mothers in the ALL group had questionnaire scores indicating clinical anxiety (46%) and depressive symptoms (27%). And there was a trend toward increased stress in the mothers of ALL patients.

However, the researchers were surprised to find that the mothers’ anxiety levels—as measured by salivary cortisol—were similar to the mothers of well children.

“This may have been affected by the fact that even the control group wasn’t without anxiety,” said study author Ellen Matthews, PhD, RN, of the Colorado University College of Nursing.

“Financial, marital, social, and career concerns mean that parents of young children experience anxiety even without ALL.”

The sleep-wake experience

In the Journal of Pediatric Nursing, the researchers described their assessment of the sleep-wake experience for mothers of ALL patients. The team conducted interviews with 20 mothers, using open-ended, semi-structured questions, and the answers were transcribed verbatim.

Two main themes emerged during these interviews. The first was dubbed, “It’s a whole new cancer world” and contained 4 subthemes: losing normality, being off-balance/insecure, juggling duties, and making transitions.

“Many [of the mothers] had lost their normal lives—lost jobs, houses, friends,” Dr Matthews said. “Some were juggling their time around their child’s needs, and they had fears about many things—fear of recurrence, fear of making a mistake with medication, fear their kids might get sick with an infection.”

The second theme that emerged in interviews was, “I don’t remember what it’s like to have sleep.” This also contained 4 subthemes: sleeping trouble before and after ALL, the child feeling sick at night, worrying, and coping with exhaustion.

The mothers also noted that once sleep arrangements had changed, they often did not return to their pretreatment “normal.”

“Mothers talked about the difficulty of sleep while giving steroid medication,” Dr Neu said. “And if the ill child got to stay up late watching movies, the siblings wanted to stay up too.”

“The same was true of sleeping in a parent’s room. If an ill child wanted to sleep close to a parent (or if a parent wanted to sleep close to an ill child), siblings tended to move in as well. Sleep can be challenging for parents of well children, and our studies show it’s even more so for parents of children who have experienced ALL.”

 

 

The researchers hope these studies increase awareness of maternal concerns after a child’s leukemia diagnosis and that leads to interventions to help mothers manage these lifestyle issues.

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Leukemia patient

Credit: Bill Branson

The stress and lifestyle changes mothers experience after a child’s leukemia diagnosis do not disappear once the disease is in the maintenance phase, new research suggests.

One study showed that mothers of patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) continued to exhibit signs of stress, anxiety, and depression when their child’s disease was in the maintenance phase.

And another study showed that a family’s daily schedule and sleeping arrangements did not return to the way they were before the child’s diagnosis.

“Even though these mothers were in the maintenance phase of their child’s illness, and the prognosis was good, we heard them say over and over that things could never go back to what they were before,” said study author Madalynn Neu, PhD, RN, of the Colorado University College of Nursing.

Stress, depression, and anxiety

In the Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing, Dr Neu and her colleagues reported their analysis of stress, anxiety, and depression among the mothers of patients with ALL. The team evaluated 26 mothers of ALL patients and 26 mothers of healthy children, who were matched according to the child’s age and gender.

To assess anxiety, the researchers collected salivary cortisol from the mothers 4 times a day for 3 consecutive days. The mothers also completed questionnaires—the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the Perceived Stress Scale.

More mothers in the ALL group had questionnaire scores indicating clinical anxiety (46%) and depressive symptoms (27%). And there was a trend toward increased stress in the mothers of ALL patients.

However, the researchers were surprised to find that the mothers’ anxiety levels—as measured by salivary cortisol—were similar to the mothers of well children.

“This may have been affected by the fact that even the control group wasn’t without anxiety,” said study author Ellen Matthews, PhD, RN, of the Colorado University College of Nursing.

“Financial, marital, social, and career concerns mean that parents of young children experience anxiety even without ALL.”

The sleep-wake experience

In the Journal of Pediatric Nursing, the researchers described their assessment of the sleep-wake experience for mothers of ALL patients. The team conducted interviews with 20 mothers, using open-ended, semi-structured questions, and the answers were transcribed verbatim.

Two main themes emerged during these interviews. The first was dubbed, “It’s a whole new cancer world” and contained 4 subthemes: losing normality, being off-balance/insecure, juggling duties, and making transitions.

“Many [of the mothers] had lost their normal lives—lost jobs, houses, friends,” Dr Matthews said. “Some were juggling their time around their child’s needs, and they had fears about many things—fear of recurrence, fear of making a mistake with medication, fear their kids might get sick with an infection.”

The second theme that emerged in interviews was, “I don’t remember what it’s like to have sleep.” This also contained 4 subthemes: sleeping trouble before and after ALL, the child feeling sick at night, worrying, and coping with exhaustion.

The mothers also noted that once sleep arrangements had changed, they often did not return to their pretreatment “normal.”

“Mothers talked about the difficulty of sleep while giving steroid medication,” Dr Neu said. “And if the ill child got to stay up late watching movies, the siblings wanted to stay up too.”

“The same was true of sleeping in a parent’s room. If an ill child wanted to sleep close to a parent (or if a parent wanted to sleep close to an ill child), siblings tended to move in as well. Sleep can be challenging for parents of well children, and our studies show it’s even more so for parents of children who have experienced ALL.”

 

 

The researchers hope these studies increase awareness of maternal concerns after a child’s leukemia diagnosis and that leads to interventions to help mothers manage these lifestyle issues.

Leukemia patient

Credit: Bill Branson

The stress and lifestyle changes mothers experience after a child’s leukemia diagnosis do not disappear once the disease is in the maintenance phase, new research suggests.

One study showed that mothers of patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) continued to exhibit signs of stress, anxiety, and depression when their child’s disease was in the maintenance phase.

And another study showed that a family’s daily schedule and sleeping arrangements did not return to the way they were before the child’s diagnosis.

“Even though these mothers were in the maintenance phase of their child’s illness, and the prognosis was good, we heard them say over and over that things could never go back to what they were before,” said study author Madalynn Neu, PhD, RN, of the Colorado University College of Nursing.

Stress, depression, and anxiety

In the Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing, Dr Neu and her colleagues reported their analysis of stress, anxiety, and depression among the mothers of patients with ALL. The team evaluated 26 mothers of ALL patients and 26 mothers of healthy children, who were matched according to the child’s age and gender.

To assess anxiety, the researchers collected salivary cortisol from the mothers 4 times a day for 3 consecutive days. The mothers also completed questionnaires—the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the Perceived Stress Scale.

More mothers in the ALL group had questionnaire scores indicating clinical anxiety (46%) and depressive symptoms (27%). And there was a trend toward increased stress in the mothers of ALL patients.

However, the researchers were surprised to find that the mothers’ anxiety levels—as measured by salivary cortisol—were similar to the mothers of well children.

“This may have been affected by the fact that even the control group wasn’t without anxiety,” said study author Ellen Matthews, PhD, RN, of the Colorado University College of Nursing.

“Financial, marital, social, and career concerns mean that parents of young children experience anxiety even without ALL.”

The sleep-wake experience

In the Journal of Pediatric Nursing, the researchers described their assessment of the sleep-wake experience for mothers of ALL patients. The team conducted interviews with 20 mothers, using open-ended, semi-structured questions, and the answers were transcribed verbatim.

Two main themes emerged during these interviews. The first was dubbed, “It’s a whole new cancer world” and contained 4 subthemes: losing normality, being off-balance/insecure, juggling duties, and making transitions.

“Many [of the mothers] had lost their normal lives—lost jobs, houses, friends,” Dr Matthews said. “Some were juggling their time around their child’s needs, and they had fears about many things—fear of recurrence, fear of making a mistake with medication, fear their kids might get sick with an infection.”

The second theme that emerged in interviews was, “I don’t remember what it’s like to have sleep.” This also contained 4 subthemes: sleeping trouble before and after ALL, the child feeling sick at night, worrying, and coping with exhaustion.

The mothers also noted that once sleep arrangements had changed, they often did not return to their pretreatment “normal.”

“Mothers talked about the difficulty of sleep while giving steroid medication,” Dr Neu said. “And if the ill child got to stay up late watching movies, the siblings wanted to stay up too.”

“The same was true of sleeping in a parent’s room. If an ill child wanted to sleep close to a parent (or if a parent wanted to sleep close to an ill child), siblings tended to move in as well. Sleep can be challenging for parents of well children, and our studies show it’s even more so for parents of children who have experienced ALL.”

 

 

The researchers hope these studies increase awareness of maternal concerns after a child’s leukemia diagnosis and that leads to interventions to help mothers manage these lifestyle issues.

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