Division of Hematology/Oncology/BMT, Children's Mercy, Kansas City, Missouri, USA.
Herron School of Art and Design, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2024 May;71(5):e30913. doi: 10.1002/pbc.30913. Epub 2024 Feb 9.
Children with cancer (ages 3-8 years) and their parents experience significant, interrelated distress associated with cancer treatment. Active music engagement (AME) uses music-based play and shared music-making to mitigate this distress. To advance our understanding about how AME works and its essential features, we interviewed parents who received the AME intervention as part of a multi-site mechanistic trial. The purpose of this qualitative analysis was to describe parents' experiences of AME for themselves and their child and to better understand how the intervention worked to lower parent-child distress.
We conducted a total of 43 interviews with parents/caregivers, and purposively analyzed all interviews from underrepresented groups based on race/ethnicity and parent role. We used thematic analysis and achieved thematic redundancy after analyzing 28 interviews.
The following statement summarizes resulting themes: Music therapists skillfully use AME to create a safe and healthy space (Theme 1), where parents/children have transformative experiences (Theme 2) that lead to learning and enactment (Theme 3) of new skills that counteract suffering (Theme 4) through empowerment, connectedness, and sustained relief.
This work elucidates how AME works to counteract stressful qualities of cancer treatment. As parents witnessed positive and transformative changes in their child, they experienced relief and reported shifts in their perspective about cancer treatment. This led to learning and use of music as a coping strategy that extended beyond therapist-led sessions. Accessible, music-based interventions, like AME, offer a developmentally appropriate and effective way to support parents and young children during treatment.
患有癌症的儿童(3-8 岁)及其父母经历与癌症治疗相关的显著的、相互关联的痛苦。主动音乐参与(AME)使用基于音乐的游戏和共同创作音乐来减轻这种痛苦。为了深入了解 AME 的工作原理及其基本特征,我们采访了作为多站点机制试验的一部分接受 AME 干预的父母。这项定性分析的目的是描述父母对自己和孩子进行 AME 的体验,更好地了解干预如何降低父母-孩子的痛苦。
我们总共对 43 名父母/照顾者进行了采访,并根据种族/族裔和父母角色对代表性不足的群体进行了所有采访的有针对性分析。我们使用主题分析,在分析了 28 次访谈后达到了主题冗余。
以下陈述总结了得出的主题:音乐治疗师巧妙地使用 AME 来创造一个安全和健康的空间(主题 1),在这个空间中,父母/孩子会有变革性的体验(主题 2),从而导致学习和实施(主题 3)新的技能,通过赋权、联系和持续缓解来对抗痛苦(主题 4)。
这项工作阐明了 AME 如何对抗癌症治疗的压力因素。当父母看到孩子发生积极和变革性的变化时,他们感到宽慰,并报告说他们对癌症治疗的看法发生了转变。这导致了对音乐的学习和使用作为一种应对策略,这种策略不仅在治疗师主导的治疗中有效,而且在治疗中也有效。像 AME 这样的基于音乐的可及性干预措施为在治疗期间支持父母和幼儿提供了一种发展适当和有效的方法。