Clinical research has led to tremendous improvements in treatment efficacy for most childhood cancers; overall 5-year survival is now greater than 75%. Long-term consequences of cure (i.e. adverse medical and psychosocial effects) have only recently begun to emerge as a primary focus of clinical research, including studies of health-related quality of life among survivors. Usually lacking in such efforts, however, is consideration of the impact of the cancer experience on the family, and the influence that the family\u27s response to cancer has on quality of life in the child. From this qualitative analysis of seven focus groups with 45 parents of children a year or more out of cancer treatment, we report those aspects of a child\u27s cance...
In this chapter we integrate families ' reports of stress, coping and social support. The analy...
OBJECTIVES: The purposes of this research were to (1) determine the association between time since t...
Background: The impact on parents of coping with a child who has cancer can be both severe and multi...
Clinical research has led to tremendous improvements in treatment efficacy for most childhood cancer...
Research on families experiencing childhood cancer and life in remission has focused on negative out...
Childhood cancer is no longer viewed as inevitably fatal but rather as a chronic life-threatening il...
Childhood cancer is considered a family disease because of its impact on the entire family system. D...
(1) Background: The onset and duration of the child’s illness is a difficult test for the entire fam...
Childhood cancer, once considered an almost exclusively fatal disease, is becoming re-understood as ...
A diagnosis of cancer represents a significant crisis for the child and their family. As the treatme...
abstract: Children with cancer can experience decreased emotional health along with deteriorating ph...
Background: The presence of cancer has a profound psychological impact on the quality of life of pat...
The construct of quality of life was developed as a means to assess an individual’s functioning acro...
Background: Childhood cancer takes a mental toll on not only the pediatric patient, but on the entir...
The diagnosis of childhood cancer is recognised as a significant stressor for families. There is a g...
In this chapter we integrate families ' reports of stress, coping and social support. The analy...
OBJECTIVES: The purposes of this research were to (1) determine the association between time since t...
Background: The impact on parents of coping with a child who has cancer can be both severe and multi...
Clinical research has led to tremendous improvements in treatment efficacy for most childhood cancer...
Research on families experiencing childhood cancer and life in remission has focused on negative out...
Childhood cancer is no longer viewed as inevitably fatal but rather as a chronic life-threatening il...
Childhood cancer is considered a family disease because of its impact on the entire family system. D...
(1) Background: The onset and duration of the child’s illness is a difficult test for the entire fam...
Childhood cancer, once considered an almost exclusively fatal disease, is becoming re-understood as ...
A diagnosis of cancer represents a significant crisis for the child and their family. As the treatme...
abstract: Children with cancer can experience decreased emotional health along with deteriorating ph...
Background: The presence of cancer has a profound psychological impact on the quality of life of pat...
The construct of quality of life was developed as a means to assess an individual’s functioning acro...
Background: Childhood cancer takes a mental toll on not only the pediatric patient, but on the entir...
The diagnosis of childhood cancer is recognised as a significant stressor for families. There is a g...
In this chapter we integrate families ' reports of stress, coping and social support. The analy...
OBJECTIVES: The purposes of this research were to (1) determine the association between time since t...
Background: The impact on parents of coping with a child who has cancer can be both severe and multi...