Qualitative
Children of mothers with breast cancer were distressed by hair loss; those >10 years of age wanted more information about their mothers condition
Forrest G, Plumb C, Ziebland S, et al. Breast cancer in the familychildrens perceptions of their mothers cancer and its initial treatment: qualitative study. BMJ 2006;332:9981003.
Q How do children of mothers with newly diagnosed breast cancer perceive their mothers illness and its initial treatment?
Key Words: breast neoplasms mother-child relations
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Qualitative study.
Oxfordshire, UK.
37 mothers with newly diagnosed stage I-IIIa breast cancer (mean age 46 y) and 31 of their children who were 618 years of age. Cancer treatment was surgery, plus chemotherapy and radiotherapy as needed.
Mothers participated in semistructured interviews, which addressed their experiences of talking with their families about their illness and their perspectives of their childrens response to the diagnosis and treatment. Children were interviewed at home by a child psychiatrist. During the 1 hour interviews, children were asked about their awareness of cancer before the diagnosis; experience of the illness, diagnosis, and treatment; and sources of information and support. Interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. Anticipated and emergent themes were explored using constant comparison.
Childrens awareness of cancer before their mothers illness. All but 2 of the youngest children had heard of cancer as a disease before the diagnosis. They learnt about cancer from
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
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