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Predicting problems in families of cancer patients

Doctor consults with a family

Credit: Rhoda Baer

A new analysis suggests family dysfunction is the greatest predictor of emotional and behavioral problems among children who have a parent with cancer.

Other variables, such as the child’s age, did not predict the risk as accurately.

And illness-related factors, such as the parent’s prognosis, did not appear to have an impact at all.

Birgit Möller, PhD, of the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf in Germany, and her colleagues reported these findings in Cancer.

The researchers evaluated 235 families in which at least 1 parent was diagnosed with cancer. This included 402 parents and 324 children aged 11 to 21 years. Parents and children completed questionnaires that assessed emotional and behavioral health.

Responses suggested that children of cancer patients have higher-than-average levels of emotional and behavioral symptoms.

The overall mean values for emotional and behavioral problems—from both the parents’ and children’s perspectives—were significantly higher in the study population than the average values from a representative non-cancer population.

General family functioning was the strongest predictor of children’s symptom status from both the parents’ and child’s perspectives.

The effects of the child’s age and gender on behavioral and emotional symptoms varied according to the subject asked. But none of the respondents reported an association between child adjustment and illness-related factors such as poor prognoses or recurrent illness.

Dr Möller noted that screening for child mental health problems, family dysfunction, and parental depression can be easily adopted into cancer care so that families in need of support can be identified.

“Additional training of oncologists, interdisciplinary approaches, and family-based mental health liaison services are recommended to meet the needs of minor

children and their families and to minimize negative long-term effects in children,” she said.

Dr Möller and her team have developed a preventive counseling program—called the Children of Somatically Ill Parents (COSIP) program—that focuses on family communication, involvement of family members, flexible problem solving, mutual support, and parenting issues.

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Doctor consults with a family

Credit: Rhoda Baer

A new analysis suggests family dysfunction is the greatest predictor of emotional and behavioral problems among children who have a parent with cancer.

Other variables, such as the child’s age, did not predict the risk as accurately.

And illness-related factors, such as the parent’s prognosis, did not appear to have an impact at all.

Birgit Möller, PhD, of the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf in Germany, and her colleagues reported these findings in Cancer.

The researchers evaluated 235 families in which at least 1 parent was diagnosed with cancer. This included 402 parents and 324 children aged 11 to 21 years. Parents and children completed questionnaires that assessed emotional and behavioral health.

Responses suggested that children of cancer patients have higher-than-average levels of emotional and behavioral symptoms.

The overall mean values for emotional and behavioral problems—from both the parents’ and children’s perspectives—were significantly higher in the study population than the average values from a representative non-cancer population.

General family functioning was the strongest predictor of children’s symptom status from both the parents’ and child’s perspectives.

The effects of the child’s age and gender on behavioral and emotional symptoms varied according to the subject asked. But none of the respondents reported an association between child adjustment and illness-related factors such as poor prognoses or recurrent illness.

Dr Möller noted that screening for child mental health problems, family dysfunction, and parental depression can be easily adopted into cancer care so that families in need of support can be identified.

“Additional training of oncologists, interdisciplinary approaches, and family-based mental health liaison services are recommended to meet the needs of minor

children and their families and to minimize negative long-term effects in children,” she said.

Dr Möller and her team have developed a preventive counseling program—called the Children of Somatically Ill Parents (COSIP) program—that focuses on family communication, involvement of family members, flexible problem solving, mutual support, and parenting issues.

Doctor consults with a family

Credit: Rhoda Baer

A new analysis suggests family dysfunction is the greatest predictor of emotional and behavioral problems among children who have a parent with cancer.

Other variables, such as the child’s age, did not predict the risk as accurately.

And illness-related factors, such as the parent’s prognosis, did not appear to have an impact at all.

Birgit Möller, PhD, of the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf in Germany, and her colleagues reported these findings in Cancer.

The researchers evaluated 235 families in which at least 1 parent was diagnosed with cancer. This included 402 parents and 324 children aged 11 to 21 years. Parents and children completed questionnaires that assessed emotional and behavioral health.

Responses suggested that children of cancer patients have higher-than-average levels of emotional and behavioral symptoms.

The overall mean values for emotional and behavioral problems—from both the parents’ and children’s perspectives—were significantly higher in the study population than the average values from a representative non-cancer population.

General family functioning was the strongest predictor of children’s symptom status from both the parents’ and child’s perspectives.

The effects of the child’s age and gender on behavioral and emotional symptoms varied according to the subject asked. But none of the respondents reported an association between child adjustment and illness-related factors such as poor prognoses or recurrent illness.

Dr Möller noted that screening for child mental health problems, family dysfunction, and parental depression can be easily adopted into cancer care so that families in need of support can be identified.

“Additional training of oncologists, interdisciplinary approaches, and family-based mental health liaison services are recommended to meet the needs of minor

children and their families and to minimize negative long-term effects in children,” she said.

Dr Möller and her team have developed a preventive counseling program—called the Children of Somatically Ill Parents (COSIP) program—that focuses on family communication, involvement of family members, flexible problem solving, mutual support, and parenting issues.

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