Multinational study of cancer patients and their children: factors associated with family functioning.

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Multinational study of cancer patients and their children: factors associated with family functioning. / Schmitt, Florence; Piha, Jorma; Helenius, Hans; Baldus, Christiane; Kienbacher, Christian; Steck, Barbara; Thastum, Mikael; Watson, Maggie; Romer, Georg.

In: J CLIN ONCOL, Vol. 26, No. 36, 36, 2008, p. 5877-5883.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Schmitt, F, Piha, J, Helenius, H, Baldus, C, Kienbacher, C, Steck, B, Thastum, M, Watson, M & Romer, G 2008, 'Multinational study of cancer patients and their children: factors associated with family functioning.', J CLIN ONCOL, vol. 26, no. 36, 36, pp. 5877-5883. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19029426?dopt=Citation>

APA

Schmitt, F., Piha, J., Helenius, H., Baldus, C., Kienbacher, C., Steck, B., Thastum, M., Watson, M., & Romer, G. (2008). Multinational study of cancer patients and their children: factors associated with family functioning. J CLIN ONCOL, 26(36), 5877-5883. [36]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19029426?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Schmitt F, Piha J, Helenius H, Baldus C, Kienbacher C, Steck B et al. Multinational study of cancer patients and their children: factors associated with family functioning. J CLIN ONCOL. 2008;26(36):5877-5883. 36.

Bibtex

@article{7fc967df3ddf4044b1af3801b279eaed,
title = "Multinational study of cancer patients and their children: factors associated with family functioning.",
abstract = "PURPOSE: This study examined factors associated with family functioning in cancer patients' families with dependent children. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A sample of 381 families (639 parents and 489 children) was recruited simultaneously in six European countries. Patients and family members completed a background questionnaire, the Family Assessment Device (FAD), the Beck Depression Inventory, and the short form version of the Medical Outcomes Health Survey. Descriptive statistics and a multilevel model that allowed a multi-informant design were used. Analyses were carried out with all participants, and separately with parent-rated and children-rated FAD scores. RESULTS: In descriptive analyses, children reported more impairment in family functioning than parents, but the difference was not significant. Depression prevalence was 35% for ill mothers and 28% for ill fathers. In the multilevel analyses with all participants (ie, adults and children) the ill parent's depression was significantly associated with impaired family functioning on five of seven FAD subscales. In analyses with only children, the perception of impairment of family functioning was not associated with parental depression. Additionally, poorer physical status of the ill parent was significantly associated with impairment on roles and communication. CONCLUSION: The ill parent's depression was the most significant factor associated with impairment in family functioning. Screening for depression, active diagnostics, and appropriate treatment of cancer patient's and partner's depression may be important to protect their children from mental disorders. Therefore, support systems need to be more family-oriented and child-centered in their approaches to cancer psychosocial care.",
author = "Florence Schmitt and Jorma Piha and Hans Helenius and Christiane Baldus and Christian Kienbacher and Barbara Steck and Mikael Thastum and Maggie Watson and Georg Romer",
year = "2008",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "26",
pages = "5877--5883",
journal = "J CLIN ONCOL",
issn = "0732-183X",
publisher = "American Society of Clinical Oncology",
number = "36",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Multinational study of cancer patients and their children: factors associated with family functioning.

AU - Schmitt, Florence

AU - Piha, Jorma

AU - Helenius, Hans

AU - Baldus, Christiane

AU - Kienbacher, Christian

AU - Steck, Barbara

AU - Thastum, Mikael

AU - Watson, Maggie

AU - Romer, Georg

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - PURPOSE: This study examined factors associated with family functioning in cancer patients' families with dependent children. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A sample of 381 families (639 parents and 489 children) was recruited simultaneously in six European countries. Patients and family members completed a background questionnaire, the Family Assessment Device (FAD), the Beck Depression Inventory, and the short form version of the Medical Outcomes Health Survey. Descriptive statistics and a multilevel model that allowed a multi-informant design were used. Analyses were carried out with all participants, and separately with parent-rated and children-rated FAD scores. RESULTS: In descriptive analyses, children reported more impairment in family functioning than parents, but the difference was not significant. Depression prevalence was 35% for ill mothers and 28% for ill fathers. In the multilevel analyses with all participants (ie, adults and children) the ill parent's depression was significantly associated with impaired family functioning on five of seven FAD subscales. In analyses with only children, the perception of impairment of family functioning was not associated with parental depression. Additionally, poorer physical status of the ill parent was significantly associated with impairment on roles and communication. CONCLUSION: The ill parent's depression was the most significant factor associated with impairment in family functioning. Screening for depression, active diagnostics, and appropriate treatment of cancer patient's and partner's depression may be important to protect their children from mental disorders. Therefore, support systems need to be more family-oriented and child-centered in their approaches to cancer psychosocial care.

AB - PURPOSE: This study examined factors associated with family functioning in cancer patients' families with dependent children. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A sample of 381 families (639 parents and 489 children) was recruited simultaneously in six European countries. Patients and family members completed a background questionnaire, the Family Assessment Device (FAD), the Beck Depression Inventory, and the short form version of the Medical Outcomes Health Survey. Descriptive statistics and a multilevel model that allowed a multi-informant design were used. Analyses were carried out with all participants, and separately with parent-rated and children-rated FAD scores. RESULTS: In descriptive analyses, children reported more impairment in family functioning than parents, but the difference was not significant. Depression prevalence was 35% for ill mothers and 28% for ill fathers. In the multilevel analyses with all participants (ie, adults and children) the ill parent's depression was significantly associated with impaired family functioning on five of seven FAD subscales. In analyses with only children, the perception of impairment of family functioning was not associated with parental depression. Additionally, poorer physical status of the ill parent was significantly associated with impairment on roles and communication. CONCLUSION: The ill parent's depression was the most significant factor associated with impairment in family functioning. Screening for depression, active diagnostics, and appropriate treatment of cancer patient's and partner's depression may be important to protect their children from mental disorders. Therefore, support systems need to be more family-oriented and child-centered in their approaches to cancer psychosocial care.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 26

SP - 5877

EP - 5883

JO - J CLIN ONCOL

JF - J CLIN ONCOL

SN - 0732-183X

IS - 36

M1 - 36

ER -