...
首页> 外文期刊>Supportive care in cancer: official journal of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer >Leaving footprints, not scars: a qualitative pilot study of Hispanic mothers' willingness to communicate with dependent children about an advanced cancer diagnosis
【24h】

Leaving footprints, not scars: a qualitative pilot study of Hispanic mothers' willingness to communicate with dependent children about an advanced cancer diagnosis

机译:留下足迹,而不是疤痕:西班牙母亲对依赖儿童沟通的定性试验研究,提出晚期癌症诊断

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

PurposeUS Hispanics are more likely to be diagnosed with advanced cancer as parents than their non-Hispanic white counterparts but little is known about Hispanic parents' willingness to discuss a terminal cancer diagnosis with dependent children, potentially resulting in suboptimal child coping. Therefore, we investigated Hispanic mothers' willingness to communicate with dependent children about her actual or hypothetical advanced cancer diagnosis.MethodsTwo focus groups (n=6 participants) and three one-on-one interviews (n=3) were conducted in either Spanish or Englishamong adult, Mexican-American mothers with a current cancer diagnosis of any stage residing in US-Mexico border communities. Participants reported their perceived concerns, parenting challenges, and openness to discussing an incurable cancer diagnosis with a dependent child. Audio files were transcribed into English and qualitatively coded using content analysis.ResultsParticipants, most with breast cancer, ranged in age from 25 to 47. Five had considered the possibility of their own death from advanced cancer and three had previously discussed this with their children. While many expected their children would carry on well without them, seven expressed concern for the emotional/spiritual well-being of their children. Mothers anticipated physical and time-based parenting challenges but wanted the opportunity to focus on themselves and their children in advance of death. All but one would be willing to discuss an advance cancer diagnosis with dependent children; four expressed the value of doing so or the potential harm of abdicating this responsibility.ConclusionsIf faced with an advanced cancer diagnosis, Mexican-American mothers are open to communicating with dependent children.
机译:目的的西班牙裔人更有可能被诊断为先进的癌症,因为父母而不是他们的非西班牙裔白色同行,但对西班牙裔父母们愿意讨论依赖儿童的终末癌症诊断,可能导致次优患儿童应对的终身癌症诊断。因此,我们调查了西班牙裔母亲对与依赖儿童沟通的意愿关于她的实际或假设的晚期癌症诊断。在西班牙语或西班牙语或三个一对一的一次面试中(n = 6名参与者)和三个一次面试(n = 3) EnglishMong成人,墨西哥美国母亲目前癌症诊断任何阶段居住在美国 - 墨西哥边境社区。与会者报告说,他们认为患有受抚养子女的癌症诊断的促进挑战,育儿挑战和开放性。音频文件被转录为英语,使用内容分析进行定性编码。培养基癌,大多数乳腺癌,25至47岁的时间范围为25至47人。五人认为他们自己死亡的可能性来自晚期癌症,而且以前曾与孩子讨论过这三年。虽然许多人预计他们的孩子不会在没有它们的情况下携带良好,但七个对孩子的情感/精神福祉表示关注。母亲预计基于身体和时间的育儿挑战,但希望有机会在死亡之前专注于自己和孩子。除了一个人愿意讨论依赖儿童的提前癌症诊断;四表示这样做的价值或侵扰这一职责的潜在危害。结论患有先进的癌症诊断,墨西哥 - 美国母亲对依赖儿童进行沟通。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号