The lived experience of children and adolescents with cancer.
Journal
Australian journal of general practice
ISSN: 2208-7958
Titre abrégé: Aust J Gen Pract
Pays: Australia
ID NLM: 101718099
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
08 2021
08 2021
Historique:
entrez:
1
8
2021
pubmed:
2
8
2021
medline:
25
11
2021
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
The lived experience of children and adolescents diagnosed with cancer differs greatly from that of the adult cancer patient. A diagnosis of cancer disrupts almost every developmental life stage and continues to affect the child, and potentially their whole family, throughout adulthood. While it is important to recognise the potential for post-traumatic growth, a considerable proportion of children and adolescents will experience poorer psychological, social, educational and quality-of-life outcomes. Parents, particularly mothers, have been shown to experience levels of post-traumatic distress even greater than that of survivors. As such, there exists a critical need to provide family-centred support from diagnosis through to long-term survivorship or bereavement. Ongoing surveillance, proactive management of chronic health conditions, and health behaviour education are critical to survivors' lifelong wellbeing and can be facilitated locally by general practitioners with support from tertiary healthcare teams in a shared-care arrangement.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
The lived experience of children and adolescents diagnosed with cancer differs greatly from that of the adult cancer patient. A diagnosis of cancer disrupts almost every developmental life stage and continues to affect the child, and potentially their whole family, throughout adulthood.
OBJECTIVE
While it is important to recognise the potential for post-traumatic growth, a considerable proportion of children and adolescents will experience poorer psychological, social, educational and quality-of-life outcomes. Parents, particularly mothers, have been shown to experience levels of post-traumatic distress even greater than that of survivors. As such, there exists a critical need to provide family-centred support from diagnosis through to long-term survivorship or bereavement.
DISCUSSION
Ongoing surveillance, proactive management of chronic health conditions, and health behaviour education are critical to survivors' lifelong wellbeing and can be facilitated locally by general practitioners with support from tertiary healthcare teams in a shared-care arrangement.
Identifiants
pubmed: 34333569
doi: 10.31128/AJGP-04-21-5945
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM