Department of Communication Studies, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045-7574, USA.
J Psychosoc Oncol. 2010;28(5):511-25. doi: 10.1080/07347332.2010.498461.
This article explores the relationships between communication and social support of parents of children with cancer (N = 44), and the importance of gender-role conflict in fathers. Structural equation modeling and the Actor-Partner Interdependence Model were used to test the expected relationships between communication, social support, gender-role conflict, and anxiety, and to control for sample nonindependence. Results suggest communication increases perceived emotional and instrumental social support between parents, and instrumental support from fathers results in less anxiety for mothers. When fathers experienced more conflict about their role as financial supporter for the family (i.e., career achievement gender-role conflict), fathers perceived less instrumental and emotional support from their wives. However, fathers who experienced more conflict about career achievement were also less anxious. A second measure of fathers' gender-role conflict (i.e., emotional expression) was unrelated to either mothers' or fathers' outcomes. The role of gender, communication, and social support in the context of pediatric oncology is discussed.
本文探讨了癌症患儿父母(N=44)的沟通和社会支持之间的关系,以及父亲中性别角色冲突的重要性。结构方程模型和演员-伙伴相互依存模型被用来测试沟通、社会支持、性别角色冲突和焦虑之间预期的关系,并控制样本的非独立性。结果表明,沟通增加了父母之间感知到的情感和工具性社会支持,父亲提供的工具性支持减少了母亲的焦虑。当父亲在家庭经济支柱(即职业成就性别角色冲突)方面经历更多冲突时,他们从妻子那里获得的工具性和情感支持就会减少。然而,经历更多职业成就冲突的父亲也不那么焦虑。父亲性别角色冲突的第二个衡量标准(即情感表达)与母亲或父亲的结果无关。讨论了儿科肿瘤学背景下的性别、沟通和社会支持的作用。