» Articles » PMID: 17557955

Understanding Parents' Approaches to Care and Treatment of Children with Cancer when Standard Therapy Has Failed

Overview
Journal J Clin Oncol
Specialty Oncology
Date 2007 Jun 15
PMID 17557955
Citations 53
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: To examine US and United Kingdom (UK) parents' approaches to care and treatment when standard therapy has failed and consider implications for clinical practice.

Methods: We conducted a prospective, ethnographic study of parents, patients, and staff, including participant-observation; open-ended, semistructured interviews; and review of medical records at a US and UK pediatric oncology center. Thirty-four children (n = 17 US, 17 UK), whose disease had recurred with less than 30% chance of cure, were enrolled between March 2001 and June 2002 and followed until death (n = 11 US, 14 UK) or close of study in December 2005 (n = 6 US, 3 UK).

Results: There were no major differences between parents' approaches in the US and UK despite differences in health care systems, institutions, and parents' religion or ethnicity. All parents continued to have or request meetings with the oncologist and investigative procedures. No parent initiated discontinuation of cancer- or symptom-directed interventions. In 28 of 34 cases (13 US, 15 UK), parents continued to pursue cancer-directed therapies; in 16 of 28 cases (seven US, nine UK), parents initiated inquires beyond what was offered.

Conclusion: Understanding parents' behavior requires attention to the reason and emotion they bring to decision making and their children's care, their unique responsibilities as parents, and what they learn throughout the illness. Parents do not see cancer-directed therapy and symptom-directed care as mutually exclusive, alternative approaches. Parents will not be constrained by what the oncologist offers. Physicians and parents discuss and negotiate care and treatment throughout the illness. Our findings suggest developing integrative care models incorporating cancer-directed, symptom-directed, and supportive care throughout the illness; they are most consistent with parents' approaches and advances in pediatric oncology.

Citing Articles

Barriers and facilitators influencing referral and access to palliative care for children and young people with life-limiting and life-threatening conditions: a scoping review of the evidence.

Holder P, Coombes L, Chudleigh J, Harding R, Fraser L Palliat Med. 2024; 38(9):981-999.

PMID: 39248205 PMC: 11491046. DOI: 10.1177/02692163241271010.


Specific Trends in Pediatric Ethical Decision-Making: An 18-Year Review of Ethics Consultation Cases in a Pediatric Hospital.

Bosompim Y, Aultman J, Pope J HEC Forum. 2024; 37(1):9-25.

PMID: 38416336 PMC: 11832791. DOI: 10.1007/s10730-024-09524-7.


Factors influencing parents' choice of palliative treatment goals for children with relapsed or refractory neuroblastoma: A multi-site longitudinal survey study.

Kaye E, Smith J, Zhou Y, Bagatell R, Baker J, Cohn S Cancer. 2023; 130(7):1101-1111.

PMID: 38100619 PMC: 10939929. DOI: 10.1002/cncr.35149.


Hopes, concerns, satisfaction and regret in a precision medicine trial for childhood cancer: a mixed-methods study of parent and patient perspectives.

Wakefield C, Hetherington K, Robertson E, Donoghoe M, Hunter J, Vetsch J Br J Cancer. 2023; 129(10):1634-1644.

PMID: 37726477 PMC: 10645918. DOI: 10.1038/s41416-023-02429-1.


Parent values and preferences underpinning treatment decision-making in poor-prognosis childhood cancer: a scoping review.

Pearson H H, Bryan G, Kayum C, Gibson F, Darlington A BMC Pediatr. 2022; 22(1):595.

PMID: 36229792 PMC: 9563461. DOI: 10.1186/s12887-022-03635-1.