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Tony Cassidy; Marian McLaughlin – Child Care in Practice, 2024
Background: It is widely accepted that family caregivers are central to the future of cancer care and the impetus is to understand how best to support and empower them. Aims: This study explored the role of the relationship between the caregiver and the child, the level of perceived support, and the self-compassion of the caregiver, on distress…
Descriptors: Cancer, Attachment Behavior, Altruism, Self Concept
Gwendolyn D. Wheatley; Elizabeth A. Goncy – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: A Peer Relations Journal, 2024
Literature on the relationship between childhood cancer and post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) is mixed. Research has shown that other factors (i.e., family problems, treatment intensity, stressful life events) impact this relationship. Researchers have examined the relationship between post-traumatic growth and experiencing cancer. We examined…
Descriptors: Correlation, Cancer, Child Development, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Zevon, Michael A.; Armstrong, Gordon D. – 1981
A review of existing stress and coping models and an analysis of the distress caused by childhood cancer suggest that a broader conceptualization of coping that includes "pleasure management" is needed. Presently, successful coping is identified as the employment of strategies which allow the individual to adapt to stress. Traditional…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Cancer, Children, Coping

Jay, Susan M.; Elliott, Charles – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1984
Evaluated the effects of increased methodological rigor on the validity of the Observation Scale of Behavioral Distress and on findings concerning whether children habituate to painful procedures. Data were scored with and without refinements. Results indicated that children do habituate but that refinements had little effect on validity. (BH)
Descriptors: Cancer, Children, Elementary Secondary Education, Habituation

Weisz, John R.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1994
Obtained reports of coping and goals from 33 children being treated for leukemia. Coping strategies were classified as primary control coping (attempts to alter objective conditions), secondary control coping (attempts to adjust to objective conditions), or relinquished control (no attempt to cope). Secondary control coping was positively…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Cancer, Children, Chronic Illness

Jay, Susan M.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1987
Evaluated efficacy of cognitive-behavioral intervention package and low-risk pharmacologic intervention (oral Valium) as compared with minimal treatment-attention control condition, in reducing children leukemia patients' distress during bone marrow aspirations. The cognitive-behavioral therapy reduced behavioral distress, pain ratings and pulse…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Cancer, Children, Cognitive Restructuring

Katz, Ernest R.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1980
The amount of anxiety suggested the need for clinical intervention to reduce procedure-related distress in children with cancer. Younger children exhibited consistently higher levels of distress than older children and displayed a greater variety of anxious responses over a longer time span. (Author/BEF)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavioral Science Research, Cancer, Children
Gronseth, Evangeline; And Others – Death Education, 1981
Data acquired in personal interviews administered to physicians and nurses who participated in the first year of the Home Care for the Child with Cancer project provided descriptions of individual sources of social support. The results reveal a range of supportive mechanisms and networks within varied institutional contexts. (Author)
Descriptors: Cancer, Children, Death, Family Environment
White, Jerre Lee – 1993
This paper reviews research literature pertaining to the pain and anxiety associated with pediatric cancer and the use of hypnosis as an adjunct treatment. It is noted that pain and anxiety are most often associated with the procedural treatment of cancer, and that the literature suggests that both pain and anxiety are multi-faceted constructs.…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Cancer, Children, Chronic Illness

Pearse, Martha – Journal of School Health, 1977
The family of a child with cancer is faced with special adjustment problems that must be confronted, including guilt, anger, and a desire to retain a sense of normalcy. (MB)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Cancer, Children, Diseases

Zebrack, Brad J.; Chesler, Mark – Health & Social Work, 2001
This article poses three questions: What do childhood cancer survivors worry about? What characteristics prompt some to worry more and others less? What effect do worries have on survivors' self-image and life outlooks? Data demonstrated significant relationships among worries, "objective" factors like physical after-effects or relapse,…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Adults, Cancer, Children
Mann, Gary M.; And Others – Essence: Issues in the Study of Ageing, Dying, and Death, 1980
Presented at the National Conference of the Forum for Death Education and Counselling, Washington, 1978, this paper explores the effects of childhood malignancy on family dynamics. Problem areas include marital difficulties, forgotten siblings, and the necessity of alternating between a "sick" and "well" world. Constructive approaches are…
Descriptors: Cancer, Children, Diseases, Family Problems

Grosfeld, F. J. M.; Lips, C. J. M.; Beemer, F. A.; van Spijker, H. G.; Brouwers-Smalbraak, G. J.; ten Kroode, H. F. J. – Patient Education and Counseling, 1997
Medical considerations about testing and possible psychological consequences for the child and family of genetically testing children are discussed. Risks include distress from ambivalent feelings toward testing, preoccupation with disease-related signs, changes in family interactions, the burdening prospect of a future disease, and medicalization…
Descriptors: Cancer, Children, Counseling, Emotional Adjustment
Hamilton, Todd Lee – 1998
This paper reviews the research on how siblings respond to another sibling who has survived childhood cancer. The paper examines the siblings' ability to cope, adjust, and adapt to this stressor. Relevant interventions are also discussed. The research indicates that although siblings may experience heightened emotional and behavioral problems,…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Behavior Problems, Cancer, Children