Objective: To explore the end-of-life experience of children with brain tumors and their families. Design: Qualitative analysis of focus group interviews. Setting: Children\u27s Hospital, London Health Sciences Center. Participants: Twenty-five parents of 17 children who had died of brain tumors. Intervention: Parents participated in 3 semistructured focus group interviews. Main Outcome Measures: Themes identified through thematic analysis of interview transcripts. Results: Qualitative analysis identified 3 primary themes. (1) Parents described the dying trajectory of their child as characterized by progressive neurologic deterioration, with the loss of the ability to communicate as a turning point. Parental coping mechanisms included striv...
Objectives: Brain tumors are the most common and fatal of all solid tumors for children and adolesce...
Background: Paediatric Palliative Care (PPC) focuses on ensuring the best possible quality of life f...
In an effort to investigate parental experience and adaptation to a child\u27s terminal illness, fif...
Approximately 25% of children diagnosed with cancer eventually die. In this thesis, the long-term ex...
Brain tumours are the second most common childhood cancer in the United Kingdom and worldwide. Patie...
Background: Parents facing the death of their child have a strong need for compassionate profession...
Background: Parents facing the death of their child have a strong need for compassionate professiona...
Context: approximately 25% of children diagnosed with cancer eventually die. Losing a child puts par...
Background: Brain tumours are the second most common form of childhood cancer, accounting for over 2...
Objective: To obtain feedback from parents of children who died from cancer about their understandin...
When talking about decisionmaking for children with a life-threatening condition, the death of child...
Background: Paediatric Palliative Care (PPC) focuses on ensuring the best possible quality of life...
Purpose: Whilst the need for aftercare for long-term sequelae of brain tumor survivors is well known...
Objective: To obtain feedback from parents of children who died from cancer about their understandin...
Objectives To provide an in-depth insight into the experience and perceptions of bereaved parents wh...
Objectives: Brain tumors are the most common and fatal of all solid tumors for children and adolesce...
Background: Paediatric Palliative Care (PPC) focuses on ensuring the best possible quality of life f...
In an effort to investigate parental experience and adaptation to a child\u27s terminal illness, fif...
Approximately 25% of children diagnosed with cancer eventually die. In this thesis, the long-term ex...
Brain tumours are the second most common childhood cancer in the United Kingdom and worldwide. Patie...
Background: Parents facing the death of their child have a strong need for compassionate profession...
Background: Parents facing the death of their child have a strong need for compassionate professiona...
Context: approximately 25% of children diagnosed with cancer eventually die. Losing a child puts par...
Background: Brain tumours are the second most common form of childhood cancer, accounting for over 2...
Objective: To obtain feedback from parents of children who died from cancer about their understandin...
When talking about decisionmaking for children with a life-threatening condition, the death of child...
Background: Paediatric Palliative Care (PPC) focuses on ensuring the best possible quality of life...
Purpose: Whilst the need for aftercare for long-term sequelae of brain tumor survivors is well known...
Objective: To obtain feedback from parents of children who died from cancer about their understandin...
Objectives To provide an in-depth insight into the experience and perceptions of bereaved parents wh...
Objectives: Brain tumors are the most common and fatal of all solid tumors for children and adolesce...
Background: Paediatric Palliative Care (PPC) focuses on ensuring the best possible quality of life f...
In an effort to investigate parental experience and adaptation to a child\u27s terminal illness, fif...