[Implementation of a Pilot Project Supporting Parents Suffering from Cancer with Underage Children].

Gesundheitswesen

Klinik für Hämatologie, Onkologie, Hämostaseologie und Stammzelltransplantation, Medizinische Fakultät, Rheinisch-Westfalische Technische Hochschule Aachen, Aachen, Germany.

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Families with a parent who has cancer face a lot of stress, especially on their kids, so a project called Brückenschlag was created to help them find support.
  • The study looked at how this project worked by gathering information from families and expert surveys.
  • Results showed that many families used the project, but there were still issues with knowing and using available support services. Brückenschlag helped connect families to the help they needed.

Article Abstract

Objective: Families with one parent suffering from cancer are exposed to extraordinary emotional and organizational burdens, affecting underaged children. To help coordinated access to social and logistic support options and thus reduce the stress on family members, the project Brückenschlag was founded. The aim of this paper was to evaluate the implementation of this pilot project following the healthcare utilization model by Andersen.

Methods: A cross-sectional observational study was conducted using a mixed-method approach. Semi-structured written expert surveys (n=10) and secondary analysis of routine data of the care model (n=171 families) were combined.

Results: Quantitative secondary analysis: The participating families had 1-7 children (median (m) 2, range (s) 6). In 66% of the cases, the mother was affected by cancer, in 20% the diseased parent was in a single parent household. The communication structure in these families was rated "limited" to "rather open". Of the total of 171 contacts (study period 9/14 to 11/17), 133 families made use of Brückenschlag; 59.2% of the contacts were made by psycho-oncologists and the social services department of the hospital. If the contact was initiated by the patients themselves or by psycho-oncologists, a guidance was established significantly more frequently (significance of chi-squared test 0.047). Qualitative analysis: There was a lack of awareness and coordination of existing support services and a lack of family resources to use existing support offers. Both the desired and the established support fell primarily in the area of organizational support. Brückenschlag improved networking and took on a navigating function for the families.

Conclusion: The data collected indicate that in families, matching the German average in their socio-demographic characteristics, a great need for organizational support develops as soon as one parent becomes sick with cancer. The model project Brückenschlag creates an access to support services for families with one parent suffering from cancer.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11248321PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1775-8181DOI Listing

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