• Lutte contre les cancers

  • Approches psycho-sociales

Grandparents of children with cancer: a controlled study of distress, support, and barriers to care

Menée en Australie auprès de 221 grands-parents d'enfants atteints de cancer et de 134 témoins (âge moyen : 65, 47 ans), cette étude analyse la prévalence de symptômes d'anxiété et de dépression, ainsi que les obstacles à l'accès à des soins psychosociaux

Objective : For families under stress, positive grandparental relationships provide a valued ‘safety net’. However, coping with family stressors can place a heavy burden on older individuals who may be experiencing declining health/energy themselves. This mixed-methods study assessed the prevalence of distress in grandparents of children with, and without, cancer, aiming to identify predictors of grandparental distress and quantify their barriers to care. Methods : Two hundred twenty-one grandparents [87 cancer group; 134 controls; mean age 65.47 years (SD=6.97); 33.5% male] completed self-report questionnaires assessing distress, anxiety, depression, anger, ‘need for help’, support use, and barriers to psychosocial care. Results : A higher proportion of grandparents in the cancer group reported clinically relevant distress (32.9% vs. 12.7%; p < 0.001), anxiety (48.8% vs. 23.9%; p < 0.001), depression (24.4% vs. 6.0%; p < 0.001), and anger (23.5% vs. 6.8%; p = 0.001). In the cancer group, distress was higher in grandmothers and in families with fewer siblings. Grandparents rarely accessed evidence-based psychosocial support (<5% in both groups), although grandparents of children with cancer were more likely to seek religious/spiritual support. Barriers to help seeking included lack of knowledge and rurality. Grandparents of children with cancer qualitatively described undisclosed feelings of uncertainty and helplessness and provided advice to other grandparents to facilitate their coping. Conclusions Grandparents of children with cancer were clearly more distressed than controls. Grandparents' capacity to support their families may be limited by their own, untreated, distress. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Psycho-Oncology

Voir le bulletin