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1.
Palliat Support Care ; 14(3): 177-86, 2016 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26126748

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to generate an explanatory model of the coping strategies that adolescents employ to manage the stressors they experience in the final months of their ill parent's life and shortly after their death. METHOD: The sample included 26 families of adolescents with a parent receiving care in a large hospice program in northeastern Ohio. A semistructured interview was conducted with 14 ill parents, 17 well parents/guardians, and 30 of their adolescent children before the parent's death and, additionally, with 6 of these families after the death. The interviews were audiotaped, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using a grounded-theory approach. RESULTS: The participants described two worlds that constituted the lives of the adolescents: the well world of normal adolescence and the ill world of having a parent near the end of life. The adolescents experienced a common challenge of living in two worlds and responded to the challenge with a process we labeled "managing two worlds." Five stages through which adolescents manage their worlds were identified: keeping the ill world and the well world separate; having the ill world intrude into the well world; moving between the ill world and the well world; being immersed in the ill world; and returning to the well world having been changed by the ill world. SIGNIFICANCE OF RESULTS: The explanatory model of "managing two worlds" outlines a complex and nuanced process that changes over time. The model can be used by health professionals who seek to help adolescents navigate this critical time when their parents are dying or have recently died. These results can also be used to inform the development of interventions that assist families with strategies tailored to an adolescent's specific needs. Future research should investigate associations among the process of "managing two worlds" and outcomes related to adolescent bereavement.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Adolescent Behavior/psychology , Hospices/methods , Parent-Child Relations , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Female , Grounded Theory , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Ohio , Parents/psychology , Qualitative Research , Stress, Psychological/etiology , Stress, Psychological/psychology
2.
J Palliat Med ; 17(5): 512-20, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24745829

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: When a parent is terminally ill, one of the major challenges facing families is informing children of the parent's condition and prognosis. This study describes four ways in which parents disclose information about a parent's life-threatening illness to their adolescent children. METHODS: We audio-recorded and transcribed 61 individual interviews with hospice patients who were recruited from a large hospice in northeastern Ohio, their spouses/partners, and their adolescent children. The interviews were coded and analyzed using a constant comparison approach. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Families inform adolescents about the progression of a parent's terminal illness in characteristic ways that remain fairly consistent throughout the illness, and are aimed at easing the adolescents' burden and distress. The families engaged in the process of disclosure in one of four ways: measured telling, skirted telling, matter-of-fact telling, and inconsistent telling. These results will inform the development of interventions that assist families with disclosure and are tailored to each family's communication style.


Subject(s)
Bereavement , Hospice Care/psychology , Parent-Child Relations , Psychology, Adolescent , Terminally Ill , Truth Disclosure , Adolescent , Female , Hospice Care/methods , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Ohio
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