Parental coping with retinoblastoma diagnosis.
Volume: 37
Issue: 3
Year of Publication: 2020
Abstract summary
To characterize coping and distress among parents of children with retinoblastoma, and to uncover their association with perceived health literacy, self-efficacy, and social support.This was a cross-sectional study performed in the retinoblastoma clinics of Beijing Children's Hospital, Jilin Eye Hospital and Changchun Hospital in China. Parents of children with retinoblastoma (n = 104) completed a print Mandarin language questionnaire consisting of four sections: (i) demographic information, (ii) mini-mental adjustment to cancer scale, (iii) hospital anxiety and depression scale, and (iv) perceived health literacy, self-efficacy, and social support scales. Scores were tabulated for each measure and analyzed by bivariate correlation.Moderate anxiety affected 59.2% of parents, and 77.7% experienced low, moderate, or high levels of depression. Combined anxiety and depression was positively correlated with helplessness/hopelessness (R = 0.42, p < .01) and anxious preoccupation (R = 0.247, p < .05), and negatively correlated with perceived self-efficacy (R = -0.228, p < .05). Perceived social support from a partner was negatively correlated with depression (R = -0.207, p < .05) and helplessness/hopelessness (R = -0.271, p < .01).Knowledge of how parents cope with their child's cancer diagnosis can help healthcare teams understand how best to support their psychosocial needs.Study Outcome
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Citations :Authors : 9
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1080/07347332.2018.1509165SSN : 1540-7586