Institute for Cancer Outcomes and Survivorship, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery and Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2023 Feb;70(2):e30066. doi: 10.1002/pbc.30066. Epub 2022 Dec 13.
Caregivers experience financial hardship during a child's cancer treatment and after their child's death. These bereaved caregivers also experience negative psychosocial outcomes following the death of a child, but the relationship between financial hardship and negative psychosocial outcomes is poorly understood in this population.
We surveyed self-selected bereaved caregivers as part of a publicly posted survey through Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation in order to explore family experiences after losing a child to cancer. The survey contained questions regarding parent psychosocial and financial outcomes following their child's death.
One-hundred seventy-six caregivers completed the survey a median of 7 years after their child's death. The majority were female (91%), non-Hispanic White (97%), and married or living with a domestic partner (76%). Overall, 31% of caregivers reported that their child's death significantly impacted the financial well-being of their family, 23% experienced a decrease in income following their child's death, and 14% were still paying medical expenses. Financial hardship that the caregiver attributed to the child's death was associated with feeling lonely and isolated (adjusted relative risk [ARR] = 1.7, 95% CI: 1.1-2.7) and living day to day (ARR = 1.8, 95% CI: 1.3-2.5), even after adjustment for household income and time since child's death.
Caregivers experience multiple financial hardships following the death of a child to cancer, which endure for years after the child's death. These hardships are associated with negative psychosocial outcomes, demonstrating the need for both financial and psychosocial interventions for caregivers following the death of a child to cancer.
在儿童癌症治疗期间及其去世后,照顾者会经历经济困难。这些失去孩子的照顾者在孩子去世后也会经历负面的心理社会后果,但在这一人群中,经济困难与负面心理社会后果之间的关系尚不清楚。
我们通过 Alex's Lemonade Stand 基金会自行选择了失去孩子的照顾者作为调查对象,参与了一项公开调查,以探讨他们在失去孩子后的家庭经历。该调查包含了有关父母在孩子去世后心理社会和经济结果的问题。
176 名照顾者在孩子去世后中位数 7 年时完成了调查。他们大多数是女性(91%)、非西班牙裔白人(97%),已婚或与伴侣生活在一起(76%)。总体而言,31%的照顾者报告说,孩子的去世对他们家庭的经济福祉产生了重大影响,23%在孩子去世后收入下降,14%仍在支付医疗费用。照顾者认为与孩子去世有关的经济困难与感到孤独和孤立(调整后的相对风险 [ARR] = 1.7,95%置信区间:1.1-2.7)和过一天算一天(ARR = 1.8,95%置信区间:1.3-2.5)有关,即使在调整了家庭收入和孩子去世后的时间后也是如此。
照顾者在孩子因癌症去世后会经历多种经济困难,这些困难会持续多年。这些困难与负面的心理社会后果有关,这表明在孩子去世后,照顾者需要接受经济和心理社会干预。